English

Critical Requirements Engineering in Practice

Software Engineering 2019-10-07 v1

Abstract

The design of software systems inevitably enacts normative boundaries around the site of intervention. These boundaries are, in part, a reflection of the values, ethics, power, and politics of the situation and the process of design itself. This paper argues that Requirements Engineering (RE) require more robust frameworks and techniques to navigate the values implicit in systems design work. To this end, we present the findings from a case of action research where we employed Critical Systems Heuristics (CSH), a framework from Critical Systems Thinking (CST) during requirements gathering for Homesound, a system to safeguard elderly people living alone while protecting their autonomy. We use categories from CSH to inform expert interviews and reflection, showing how CSH can be simply combined with RE techniques (such as the Volere template) to explore and reveal the value-judgements underlying requirements.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1910.01678,
  title  = {Critical Requirements Engineering in Practice},
  author = {Leticia Duboc and Curtis McCord and Christoph Becker and Syed Ishtiaque Ahmed},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1910.01678},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

1 figure, submitted to and accepted for publication in IEEESW

R2 v1 2026-06-23T11:34:07.960Z