I have recently made a research proposal that involves using workshops to expose people to #permacomputing principles in order to assess if oppositional knowledge (which may lead to digital citizenship type activism) can be cultivated.

As I primarily found out about #permacomputing via people I follow on the fediverse, this toot is firstly a thank you!  I find this to be a super solid framing of computing's issues, and a gateway to great conversations. It also makes me feel connected to great people across many lands. 

Now the question: in my literature review, I'm focusing on three topics, #Digital #Activism, #Critical #EdTech and #Decolonial #Computing #decolonialcomputing. Concerning this last area, I have read and reviewed material by Dourish & Mainwaring, Edwin Black, Caroline Hunter & the Polaroid Revolutionary Workers Movement, Mustafa Syed Ali, Brian Cantwell Smith, Micheal Kwet, Ulises Ali Mejias & Nick Couldry, Jonathan Crary and @abebab

Have I missed any important literature from Decolonial Computing that may overlap with the other literature themes? I'd be very grateful for any thoughts! :)

Jon Corbett explores how Indigenous cultural knowledge can be a framework for computing science and computer programming in this fascinating Causal Islands đŸïž talk. https://youtu.be/SWVLwxwcl1Q #indigenouscomputing #decolonialcomputing #indigenous
Indigitalization: Indigenous Computing Theory - Jon Corbett

YouTube
#DecolonialComputing #DecolonisingComputing in relation to planetary concerns: #environment #ecology #computing #limits #resources #waste #climate | computingwithinlimits.org