Rightful Presence and Radical Making

Photo: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair

Rightful Presence and Radical Making

Andrew Newman (AU/AT), Eva Vesseur (NL), Louise Archer (GB)

What does it take to truly share power with young people in a world shaped by accelerating technology and deepening inequality? In this keynote conversation, Professor Louise Archer and Eva Vesseur explore how makerspaces can become sites of resistance, equity, and youth-led transformation. From challenging extractive STEM education to cultivating techno-agency and rightful presence, this panel asks how we can move beyond inclusion to co-creation—and why making might just be a form of democratic rebellion.

POSTCITY, First Floor, Education Stage

Fr. 5. Sep. 2025 15:35 16:15

Sprache //

EN

  • Louise Archer

    Professor Louise Archer, OBE, holds the Karl Mannheim Chair in Sociology of Education at UCL. Her award-winning research focuses on equity and diversity in STEM, particularly in relation to social class, gender, and race/ethnicity across primary, secondary, higher, and informal learning contexts. She has authored over 180 publications and has directed numerous large-scale national and international research studies on youth participation in schools, makerspaces, and informal STEM learning settings.

  • Andrew Newman

    Andrew Newman fosters transdisciplinary cultures as a producer for Ars Electronica’s European Platform and co-founder of the award-winning Research Institute for Art and Technology. He unites artists, scientists, and industry (STUDIOTOPIA, Label4Future), advances STEAM learning and critical thinking (Critical ChangeLab, OSHub, STEAM INC), champions citizen science (EU Prize for Citizen Science), and advocates for collaborative, empathetic thinking to create new narratives for our shared futures.

Presented in the context of Critical ChangeLab. Critical ChangeLab is funded by the European Union under Grant Agreement No. 101094217 - HORIZON-CL2-2022-DEMOCRACY-01-04.