Publications
Peer-reviewed Journal Articles
> Baibarac C and De Lange M (under review) Controversing the Datafied Smart City: Conceptualising a Controversy-mediated Approach to Civic Engagement. Big Data & Society.

> Baibarac, C., Petrescu, D. and Langley, P. (2019). Prototyping open digital tools for urban commoning, CoDesign International Journal of CoCreation in Design and the Arts, 1-18.

> Baibarac, C. and Petrescu, D. (2017). Co-design and urban resilience: visioning tools for commoning resilience practices, CoDesign International Journal of CoCreation in Design and the Arts, 1-19.

> Baibarac, C. and Petrescu, D. (2017). Open-source resilience: a connected commons-based proposition for urban transformation. Procedia Engineering, 198, 227-239.

> Petrescu, D., Petcou, C. and Baibarac, C. (2016). Co-producing a commons based resilience strategy: Lessons from R-Urban, Building Research and Information, 44 (7), 717-36.

> Baibarac, C. (2015). Spatial-Technological Experiments in the Environment: Eliciting and Representing Experiences of Urban Space, Digital Creativity, 26 (3-4), 263-78.

> Baibarac, C. (2014). The ‘Urban Spacebook’ experimental process: Co-designing a Platform for Participation, The Journal of Community Informatics, 10(3): 1-16.

> Siddall, E., Baibarac, C. et al. (2011). Personas as a user-centred design tool for the built environment, Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers: Engineering Sustainability, 164 (1), 59-69.
Book Chapters
> Baibarac, C. (2017). Co-Producing Tools for Participation and Action in Urban Environments. In S. Konomi, & G. Roussos (Eds.), Enriching Urban Spaces with Ambient Computing, the Internet of Things, and Smart City Design (pp. 128-144). Hershey, PA: IGI Global.


> (Un)Gluing Design: Re-imagining Human-Technological Relations in the (post)“Lockdown City” (co-authored with Verhoeff, N.), Philosophy of Human-Technology Relations, 4-7 November 2020, DesignLAB, University of Twente, Netherlands.

> From controversy-paralysis to controversy-fueled collaboration: supporting the collective sensemaking of human-city-technology interaction with futures-oriented methods (co-authored with Matos Castaño, J., Geenen, A., and van de Voort, M.), Philosophy of Human-Technology Relations, 4-7 November 2020, DesignLAB, University of Twente, Netherlands.

> “From controversies to controversing: enacting civic participation in the datafied smart city” (co-authored with de Lange, M.), Data Justice 2020 - Civic Participation in the Datafied Society, postponed for May 2021, Data Justice Lab, Cardiff University, UK.

> Open-source resilience: a connected commons-based proposition for urban transformation (co-author Petrescu, D.), Urban Transitions Summit, 6-9 September 2016, Shanghai, China.

> Investigating possibilities for co-producing urban resilience through co-designed platforms (co-author Petrescu, D.), Challenges and Best Practice in Co-production, 18 May 2016, University of Sheffield, UK.

> Geovisualising timeuse data to understand the timing and flexibility of social practices and energy demand in UK cities (co-author Hanna, R. and Yeboah, G.), Conference of the International Association for Time Use Research (IATUR), 30/07-01/08 2014, Åbo Akademi University, University of Turku, Finland.

> An 'Urban Spacebook’, Mobility Futures, 4-6/09 2013, Lancaster University, Centre for Mobilities Research (CeMoRe), UK.

> Mobile Cityscapes, Governing Mobilities, 30/10-1/11 2012, EPFL Lausanne, Switzerland.

> Contextualising (un)sustainable mobility practices, Local and Mobile: linking mobilities, mobile communication and locative media, 16-18/03 2012, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, US.
Conference Presentations
> Philosophy of Human-Technology Relations Conference (5 Nov. 2020, online workshop): “Agonistic engagement spaces: towards democratising the smart city” (co-organised with Julieta Matos Castaño and Anouk Geenen).

> Media Architecture Biennale 2020 (postponed for Spring 2021), 1-day workshop: "Coproducing Media Interfaces for Inclusive Smart Cities" (co-organised with Julieta Matos Castaño and Anouk Geenen).

> Interactivos?'12, 'Dublin Hack the City' Exhibition, Science Gallery Dublin (2012), 'InfiniteCity: draw the city with your footsteps, annotate and share'.

> '10 Eyes of Dublin' Exhibition, Science Gallery Dublin (2010), 'Uncovering the (un)sustainability of a new suburban Dublin neighbourhood by walking.


Workshops & Exhibitions