The Corruption of Co-Design : Political and Social Conflicts in Participatory Design Thinking
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Overview
Designers are often depicted as social change agents that serve the good in the world. Similarly, co-design tends to be described as a democratic mode of creativity that is somehow beyond reproach. But is change a virtue in itself, and do participatory practices always produce socially beneficial outcomes?
Such questions are becoming more pressing as co-design has emerged as a dominant practice in planning and urban design, while also informing corporate management and public administration. In this book, Otto von Busch and Karl Palm s suggest that designers tend to overemphasize the place of ideals in design, leaving them ill-equipped to deal with a social world of power-wielding and zero-sum games. Seeking to reorient the concerns of the Scandinavian tradition of participatory design, they suggest that co-design processes are rife with betrayals, decay, and corruption, and that designerly empathy has morphed into a new form of cunning statecraft.
In putting forward Realdesign as an alternative conception of design practice, von Busch and Palm s ask: What hard lessons about the social must today's designers learn from realists like Machiavelli?
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Details
- ISBN-13: 9781032250014
- ISBN-10: 1032250011
- Publisher: Routledge
- Publish Date: February 2023
- Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.31 inches
- Shipping Weight: 0.44 pounds
- Page Count: 136
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