Dedicated to critical cultural production at the intersection of art and activism.

We cover artists from around the globe whose work explores and realizes social change. Our goal is to provide a narrative about these activist efforts while simultaneously participating in them. Maintained by The Groundswell Collective since 2007.

Designing the Revolution

Alix Rule recently penned an article titled The Revolution Will Not Be Designed for In These Times. The article centers around a criticism of Stanford’s Hasso Plattner Institute of Design for their consideration that design – or more precisely, design thinking – is a “powerful corrective force” in addressing social problems. I invest considerable time, effort, and money in designing for social change, so when I first stumbled upon the article I was outraged. After a closer look, though, and after mulling over Alix’s arguments, I began to see that she may be right on some accounts.

Social justice inherently seeks systemic change to redress oppression. Rule’s objection to design thinking is that it serves as a”post-ideology” ideology, one which is stripped of considerations for “the long process by which consensus is built—a.k.a. politics.” Her case is that:

In particular, design metaphors obscure the ideological—and political—decisions involved in tackling societal issues. Depending on your perspective, “drunk driving” can be a symptom of some broader systemic failure (from un-walkable suburbs to deficient public education), a lapse of individual responsibility, or a right to be defended. The solution to the problem is inseparable from its conception. Conceiving of global ills as design challenges may sometimes be in order, but only when a consensus exists on goals, budgets and relevant values. Such is rarely the case.

From Alix’s perspective, the designer-cum-activist is taught to be pragmatic and innovative, rather than pensive and academic. Theoretically speaking, their role is to step in after social justice has been achieved, to ensure that utopia looks nice.

The death knell that Alix would ring on design thinking is sounded by the same thing that draws me to design as an activist tool in the first place. Design thinking neatly skirts the system and hands out tools. Consensus is rarely reached, so what can the concerned do in the meantime? The answer is be practical and innovative, rather than pensive and academic. As an activist of many years, I can personally attest that bringing radical ideas to the table, and trying to form consensus around them is a difficult task, even in the most hospitable environments. What inspires me about the new design thinking is its direct application. It is action that is deliberate and well thought out, and it doesn’t suffer from Ivory Tower vertigo.

Social justice hinges on changing an unjust system, so where Alix is right is not in blaming designer-activists for trying, but for not being holistic enough. Drunk driving can be seen from many perspectives, and in her example, designers are addressing it from only one. She cites a New York Times article (”Design That Solves the Problems of the World’s Poor”) that describes an efficiency-improving device for “peasant women fetching water.” No doubt the device will benefit their society considerably, as their work is central to survival, but what about addressing patriarchy? Writ large, design thinking could obscure wider solutions that get at the root of social issues.

Also, Alix is right for blaming designers for the strange company that they keep. All those seriously committed to social change know that the landed gentry have a singular interest – protecting their wealth and privilege. So, when BusinessWeek’s Bruce Nussbaum trumpets d.school’s program for its “powerful methodology,” it should make the activist cringe. More, these are the interests represented when stakeholders come to the table, and a skeptic like myself has to question their motivations.

The question thus arises, do we need more design thinking, or less?

Related posts:

  1. Art and Revolution: Transversal Activism in the Long Twentieth Century


Discuss (3)

#1 posted by Ryan Christopher, January 30, 2008 6:37 PM

Some important questions, no doubt. Thank you for bringing this to our attention.

James,

A thought-provoking analysis and a pleasure to read.

As you know from our correspondence I write on Universal Design. Reading your essay reminded of a a distinction that Rudiger Leidner of NATKO made in a 2006 presentation “Tourism Accessible for All in Europe.” ( http://www.rollingrains.com/archives/Tourism_for_all_in_Europe_Leidner_2006.pdf ). The distinction was between US conceptualizations of Universal Design and a European rebranding known as Design for All. At first I thought it was quibbling but his distinction is also a method for reinserting the vitality of the political/social justice dynamic into the design process:

“…the main difference between the D[esign]F[or]A[all] idea and similar approaches such as “universal design” is that the targeted users should be involved in the
process of product development.”

#3 posted by John Moorehead, January 31, 2008 11:30 AM

James, thank you for bringing this up. This is a tough issue, to be sure. Simply put, this is the way we -as designers- communicate, and we are part of the world with a voice equal to everyone else’s voice. I have seen firsthand the impact design can have and I know the effort is not wasted. If there are people who commission us to help communicate notions of any kind through design, we must be “thinking designers” and carry the task in the best way we can.

I appreciate the article’s intent of keeping us “in check” with the scope of solutions design is providing(or not providing), but that is the limit of the credit that I give Alex’s article. I’m too busy actively engaged in the process and development of better ideas rather than just innovative design. This article made me question those who theorize how design is produced like Alex, and how they can become more of an active participant in a solution. I think that is the heart of activism, and we see that doing solves more than saying.

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