The Social Design Toolkit
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Date
2021
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Abstract
Designers are instigators of change, and the decisions they make can impact
people’s lives in unexpected ways. The ideology behind social design is that designers
have a social responsibility to create positive change by prioritizing people in their
decisions. However, the commercialization of design practice often puts several degrees
of separation between the people who design products, the people who make them,
and the people who consume them, leading to design which elevates the designer’s
process above people’s needs.
There are several human-centered methodologies in existence across a range
of disciplines (from cultural anthropology to design thinking), but these usually operate
independently of one another, and each has its own unique constraints. The Social
Design Toolkit offers a hybrid workflow called participatory design thinking that provides
opportunities for these methodologies to overlap, placing human experience at the core
of every design decision.
Herbert Simon defines design as “courses of action aimed at changing existing
situations into preferred ones” (Simon 111), and social design is a holistic way of
embracing cultural difference and reducing the social gap between the creators of
culture and those who experience that culture. It is through this that we make design
accessible and strengthen its output for everyone.
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Degree
Master of Art and Design
Discipline
Art + Design