The Unfinished Symphony

Once upon a time in a small town, there lived a talented but reclusive composer named Oliver. Known for his mysterious persona, he spent his days locked away in his cluttered attic, pouring his heart…

Smartphone

独家优惠奖金 100% 高达 1 BTC + 180 免费旋转




BLOG POSTS AND WEB PAGES

A compilation of exercises, frameworks, and thoughts that serve to advance the design field’s relationship with systems that perpetuate oppression.

Like the design process itself, the aim for this resource collection is to be iterative and ever-evolving.

It has been a turbulent past few years on race in this country. Writer and journalist Jeff Chang notes in his 2016 essay book, We Gon’ Be Alright: Notes on Race and Resegregation,

Equity meets design

To fully operate as socially-minded designers, as creative humans who strive for “social impact,” confronting equity and its barriers is crucial to acknowledging the dignity of the communities we enter; to be our authentic selves so that we can move beyond transactional relationships to relational ones. This issue is urgent: a critical reflection not only on the design process, but also on ourselves and our position as designers.

Over the past few weeks, I’ve been striving to figure out how to articulate the themes and insights I’ve encountered in my work as a design researcher. The desire and frustration to somehow produce an articulate and cohesive viewpoint on how design and equitable practices come together has been a galvanizing force, but so many questions were popping up and lingering in my mind.

As my usual go-to mode when I’m stuck, I wanted to learn and codify my knowledge on who has already taken actions around these questions; hence the list. But for collective action to launch and amplify, a common understanding of equity is vital.

What I talk about when I talk about equity

In short, my intention is to signal boost these existing resources, so that more designers, design researchers, and any other folks working at the crossroads of design and disenfranchised individuals and communities can examine and/or build upon them.

A blog series that aims to elevate the dialogue related to designing for equity by bolstering new voices and new perspectives.

A glossary that highlights the nuances around the concepts of diversity, equality, equity, privilege, and power — especially within the design field.

equityxdesign
Creators: Caroline Hill, Michelle Molitor, and Christine Ortiz

equityXdesign is a practice that merges the consciousness of racial equity work with the methodology of design thinking.

An overview of three bias-aware practices that Reboot staff members incorporate into the design research process

Formulated by the Creative Reaction Lab, Equity-Centered Community Design is a creative problem solving process founded on equity, humility-building, integrating history and healing practices, addressing power dynamics, and co-creating with the community.

This meal kit is built on the premise that the topic of equity can be hard to address, so people need to make time, space, and a supportive environment to have these discussions. It lays out a structure for having important conversations on race and equity in the design field, and a way to capture and communicate the breakthrough moments that participants generate.

As a tool to help designers heighten awareness of the biases they bring to design work, this booklet prompts designers to notice their own behaviors, the behaviors of others, and the outcomes of systemic oppression.

Stemming from Creative Reaction Lab’s process for Equity-Centered Community Design, these worksheets offer deeper documentation and reflection on sector strengths for collaboration, humility and empathy building, and community needs.

This card deck introduces the liberatory design process, mindsets, and practices, so that aspiring equity-centered designers can construct a paradigm of design that is diverse, inclusive, and equitable.

A brief summary of the presentations, conversations, and group exercises from a one-day convening that explores the role design can play in building more equitable and just communities.

To emphasize the necessary vulnerability and courage to cultivate one’s self-awareness as an equity-centered designer, this re-imagining of the design thinking process adds two new design modes to the existing hexagonal d.school design thinking graphic: Notice and Reflect.

In this webinar, select practitioners share a look under the hood of their initiatives, discuss successes and challenges along the way, and highlight replicable approaches to generating racial equity through design in practices and communities.

Reflex Design Collective presents a curricular framework that integrates design thinking with social justice to transcend flaws, such as a myopic focus on technological innovation and failure to address political power dynamics, as well as complex social problems.

Now, for a moment, forget about this compilation of resources.

To build upon educator Jose Vilson’s piercing point, this post is simply a list of resources. Will, leadership, and tolerance for discomfort — among other traits — are critical for moving forwards. Additionally, as Antionette Carroll has described her work at Creative Reaction Lab, “I’m not looking for process adoption, I’m looking for mindset change.”

While one of my main goals for this resource list is to help disseminate existing knowledge and tools, meaningful and sustained change within our own consciousness is the fundamental first step for widescale change.

How might you cultivate an equity-focused mindset and practice?

I intend for this post to be a living, work-in-progress list of resources. If you have any suggestions, comments, or other musings, please don’t hesitate to leave a response. If you enjoyed this read, give a clap so that others may find it.

Last Updated: October 2017

Add a comment

Related posts:

The productive benefits of doing less to achieve more

We look with envy at successful people. Somehow, they have unlocked a pool of unlimited time. That serial entrepreneur with all the successful start-ups in Silicon Valley. The visionary movie…

Black On Black Porsche 911 With Factory AeroKit Will Wow

The 911 is probably the most popular Porsche model ever and for good reason, as proven in this 2001 Porsche 911 Carrera 6-speed with factory AeroKit. The model has been showing the world what can be…

A unique way of knowing yourself

The life we are living is too busy that sometimes we don’t even have time for ourselves. The pet 24/7 routine made us a stranger. We don’t have time to sit with others, talk about their issues. Our…