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Tuning into the World: Designing Community Safety Technologies to Reduce Dysfunctional Fear of Crime

Published: 01 July 2024 Publication History

Abstract

Platforms like Nextdoor and Citizen can increase users’ fear of crime by broadcasting frequent, local, and personalized information about potential safety risks. These platforms can contribute to a dysfunctional fear of crime, which undermines a person’s quality of life and mental health without actually making them feel safer. In this work, we conducted a mixed-methods study to understand the potential for design to foster a functional fear of crime, which motivates precaution without negatively impacting quality of life. We first interview individuals with a dysfunctional fear of crime and then validate interview results with a survey. Through this process, we identified five strategies for designers to support users in developing a more functional fear of crime. These strategies surface overarching theoretical and design implications for designers and researchers of safety platform with the ultimate goal of supporting safety, quality of life, and mental health for users of these platforms.

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  1. Tuning into the World: Designing Community Safety Technologies to Reduce Dysfunctional Fear of Crime

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    cover image ACM Conferences
    DIS '24: Proceedings of the 2024 ACM Designing Interactive Systems Conference
    July 2024
    3616 pages
    ISBN:9798400705830
    DOI:10.1145/3643834
    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License.

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    Published: 01 July 2024

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    Author Tags

    1. anxiety
    2. community safety
    3. crime
    4. fear
    5. safety
    6. safety technologies
    7. social media

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