在这个“移动房屋”里洗手间在哪里?将水、环境卫生和个人卫生(WaSH)基础设施纳入无家可归和数字媒体议程

E. Polson, R. Botta, Emily van Houweling
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管自2010年以来,获得水和卫生设施已被联合国确认为人权,但在日常生活中,特别是在无家可归的人群中,获得水和卫生设施仍然是一个困难的问题。在这篇论文中,我们从两个夏天在科罗拉多州丹佛市的一个关于无家可归者和水、环境卫生和个人卫生的实地工作课程中吸取教训,来考虑城市公共厕所的谷歌地图是否对无家可归者有用。这篇论文的概念框架源于哈特曼的“归家”概念——指的是数字媒体如何帮助无家可归的人创造日常生活,对他们的生活和空间进行一些控制,并逐渐创造一个安全的环境——考虑谷歌水、卫生和卫生地图是否可以帮助无家可归的人将洗手间纳入日常生活,完善所谓的“移动家园”,提供救济和个人机构。这一努力遇到了数字素养问题,这些问题削弱了“获取”,并指出了技术解决方案的局限性。本文指出,在创建数字解决方案以解决无家可归者面临的问题时,需要考虑媒体素养和包容性设计。我们还认为,规划者应该全面考虑以数字和电信为重点的“解决方案”如何与其他必要的基础设施(在本例中是公共厕所和供水)相关联。
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Where's the bathroom in this “mobile home”? Adding Water, Sanitation & Hygiene (WaSH) infrastructure to agendas on homelessness and digital media
Although access to water and sanitation have been recognized by the United Nations as human rights since 2010, that access continues to be a site of struggle in everyday life, especially among homeless populations. In this paper, we draw from two summers of a fieldwork-based course on homelessness and Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene in Denver, Colorado to consider whether a Google Map of public restrooms in the city might be useful for unhoused people. The paper's conceptual framework stems from Hartmann's idea of “homing”—which refers to how digital media can help unhoused people create everyday routines, exercise some control over their lives and spaces, and gradually create a safe environment—to consider whether the Google Water, Sanitation & Hygiene Map might help unhoused people integrate bathroom access into routines, rounding out the so-called “mobile home” to provide relief and personal agency. The effort runs up against digital literacy issues that mitigate “access” and point to the limits of techno-solutions. This paper points to the need to consider both media literacies and inclusive design in creating digital solutions to address issues faced by unhoused people. We also argue that planners should think holistically about how digital and telecom-focused “solutions” relate to other necessary infrastructures—in this case, public toilets and water access.
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