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Weaving Indigeneity and Culture into the Fabric of HCI Futures
Abstract
Interconnectedness and relationality have become central to technology development and innovation, highlighting the growing importance of indigenous and cultural philosophies in shaping effective and inclusive design practices. This workshop seeks to challenge the dominant paradigms in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) by exploring how African indigeneity and culture can inform and transform design methodologies. We invite participants to reflect on how these approaches can steer HCI research toward more inclusive, culturally diverse, and mutually beneficial collaborations. We welcome HCI researchers, practitioners, indigenous scholars, and cultural experts who are interested in disrupting traditional methods and embracing indigenous and cultural perspectives to join this vital conversation. Together, we aim to reimagine HCI practices through the lens of cultural and indigenous knowledge, fostering innovation that respects and integrates diverse world-views.
Citation
Jaydon Farao, Ajit G. Pillai, Hafeni Mthoko, Marly Muudeni Samuel, Houda Elmimouni, and Shaimaa Lazem. 2025. Weaving Indigeneity and Culture into the Fabric of HCI Futures. In Proceedings of the Extended Abstracts of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI EA '25). Association for Computing Machinery, New York, NY, USA, Article 806, 1–6. https://doi.org/10.1145/3706599.3706737
Authors
Houda Elmimouni
Assistant ProfessorAs well as: Jaydon Farao, Ajit G. Pillai, Hafeni Mthoko, Marly Muudeni Samuel, and Shaimaa Lazem
