Picture of Madeline Balaam

I want to see a world that is fairer, more just and more sustainable!

Meet Madeline Balaam, Associate Professor at the Division of Media Technology and Interaction Designs at KTH. Madeline is also an Associate Director for Mobility, a Member of the Executive Committee and a PI of research project Layering Trust in Intimate Digital Health Technologies at Digital Futures.

Hi Madeline, describe your role at Digital Futures?

– I organise and direct the mobility work for Digital Futures. We focus on bringing talented, inspiring and creative researchers to the Digital Futures environment in order to diversify and invigorate the work that can happen within the centre. On a week-by-week basis the work I do is really quite wide-ranging, from writing and promoting funding calls, recruiting and supporting the peer review of applications to our various calls, collaborating with HR to ensure the calls are a good fit for the various institutions involved in Digital Futures, through to supporting the growing cohort of postdoc fellows in creating a programme of activities to support their career development.  In all the work I undertake for Digital Futures I take seriously my commitment to creating a more diverse and inclusive research environment. 

Tell us a bit about your long-time experience in research and what motivates you as a researcher?

– I have been doing research within the area of interaction design for nearly 20 years, first in the UK and now in Sweden. My work has very broadly spanned the design and development of novel digital interactions for various forms of personal healthcare, from developing technologies to support stroke rehabilitation in the home, to creating novel mobile interactions to help people understand their intimate anatomy. My research is inspired by, and gives back to feminist theories and methodologies. Key principles of care, participation, plurality and embodiment resonate strongly in the things I create and study. I am an impatient researcher, and I am driven in many of things I do because I want to see a world that is fairer, more just and more sustainable. 

In your profile you state that you are driven by a desire to design technologies which better meet the needs and practices of people in their everyday lives – can you tell us a bit more? Where does this interest come from?

–  Something that Digital Futures must grapple with is producing basic research on digitisation that has a use and purpose for society. For me, the only way that this can be achieved is by working deeply with society to help identify and shape the research that we do. 

Finally, tell us a little bit about yourself!

– Ive lived in Sweden for four years and am still getting used to the Swedish way of life. I still dont know what you are supposed to do on Midsummer and why so much pickled fish is involved. I do enjoy fika, forest walks, picking mushrooms, but I am not so keen on snow or skiing. 

Link to the profile of Madeline Balaam

More news

A person with short light brown hair and round orange glasses smiles slightly while wearing a grey shirt in a sunlit indoor space with blurred background.

Towards Human–AI Symbiosis: Google XR’s Mar Gonzalez-Franco to speak at Digitalize in Sthlm

15/10/2025

How will humans and AI collaborate in the future? As artificial intelligence continues to evolve,...

A smiling man wearing glasses and a suit holds an award certificate on stage, standing in front of a blue background with the word earpa and a stylised car outline.

Sacha Baclet wins “Best Young Researcher Elevator Pitch” award at EU Forum in Brussels

13/10/2025

Brussels, October 2025 — KTH young researcher Sacha Baclet has been awarded the prize for “Best Young Researcher...

A hand holds a round object against a blurred sunset background. Text reads: Digital Futures marks its fifth anniversary this October – five years since its inauguration on 1 October 2020.

Shaping the next five years: Annika Szabo Portela on leading Digital Futures

01/10/2025

Digital Futures marks its fifth anniversary this October – five years since its inauguration on...

A speaker stands on stage under a large screen that reads, “Welcome to SafeComp 2025! Social event with research demonstrations, posters and surprises in the KTH Reactor Hall (R1)!” at KTH, with event logos and colourful lighting.

SafeComp 2025: Shaping the Future of Safety-Critical Computing

24/09/2025

From September 9–12, 2025, nearly 200 participants from more than 20 countries gathered at KTH Royal Institute...