Quadratic Voting Plateform
A voting platform to experiment with quadratic (non-binary) voting, enabling participants to express the intensity of their preference by distributing their "vote credit" among a set of proposals.
Justine Peneau is a post-doctoral researcher at the Transition design lab of CY Design School.
Justine Peneau holds a Ph.D. in Design since January 2023. She is currently a postdoctoral researcher within the Design research group, as part of the PEPR LINDDA project: Living Infrastructure to Design responsible Digital technology for Agroecological transition. Her research explores the temporal dimension of design, particularly in the context of collaborative and/or participative design approaches. She examines time from an anthropological perspective, viewing it as a framework that simultaneously enables and constrains interactions, productions, know-how, tools, etc. Following a sociology of emergence, she also observes the dynamics at play in co-design situations.
Since november 2023, and for 2 years, Justine Peneau is working on the PEPR LINDDA project: Living Infrastructure to Design responsible Digital technology for Agroecological transition. In this contexte she contributes to elaborate and evaluate a conceptual and methodological framework for an “living” infrastructure design model for agroecological digital transition. She also participates to the analysis and co-design of a responsible digital model for agroecological transition, at the interface between humans, living beings, non-humans, and non-living entities.
A voting platform to experiment with quadratic (non-binary) voting, enabling participants to express the intensity of their preference by distributing their "vote credit" among a set of proposals.
LINDDA: Living INfrastructure to Design responsible Digital technology for Agroecological transition, aims to understand the design modalities in place or needed for digitally-supported agro-ecological transitions.
A voting platform to experiment with quadratic (non-binary) voting, enabling participants to express the intensity of their preference by distributing their "vote credit" among a set of proposals.
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