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Design for meaningful innovation

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Design for meaningful innovation. / Walker, Stuart.
The Routledge Companion to Design Studies. ed. / Penny Sparke; Fiona Fisher. Abindgon, Oxford: Routledge, 2016. p. 395-408 33.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Walker, S 2016, Design for meaningful innovation. in P Sparke & F Fisher (eds), The Routledge Companion to Design Studies., 33, Routledge, Abindgon, Oxford, pp. 395-408.

APA

Walker, S. (2016). Design for meaningful innovation. In P. Sparke, & F. Fisher (Eds.), The Routledge Companion to Design Studies (pp. 395-408). Article 33 Routledge.

Vancouver

Walker S. Design for meaningful innovation. In Sparke P, Fisher F, editors, The Routledge Companion to Design Studies. Abindgon, Oxford: Routledge. 2016. p. 395-408. 33

Author

Walker, Stuart. / Design for meaningful innovation. The Routledge Companion to Design Studies. editor / Penny Sparke ; Fiona Fisher. Abindgon, Oxford : Routledge, 2016. pp. 395-408

Bibtex

@inbook{5fd23acc97da4f0d82cc8954eaa02298,
title = "Design for meaningful innovation",
abstract = "Design research today is characterized by its focus on technological innovation, especially digital innovation, and on collaborations between university researchers and private or public sector organizations to address practical concerns. In tandem with this direction, funding bodies encourage and often stipulate cross-disciplinary partnerships and look favourably upon projects that contribute to {\textquoteleft}real world{\textquoteright} impact. These widespread practices, however, can be problematic. They tend to endorse, rather than disinterestedly critique, the dominant paradigm, which despite its many material and practical benefits, is highly destructive of the natural environment, deeply inequitable and socially divisive and, on an individual level, associated with a sense of meaninglessness. Also, such intimate involvement of funding bodies in the positioning of academic inquiry can seriously compromise vitally important elements of scholarship, not least critical distance and academic freedom. Despite the difficulties of doing so within this trenchantly instrumental climate, some take a different path, pursuing design studies that critique narrowly framed technological and economic interpretations of progress; business-focused academic research; and the prioritization of {\textquoteleft}impact{\textquoteright} over curiosity-based inquiry. It is a path that offers opportunities for design to address some of the more significant concerns of our age. Over time, such work may be capable of fostering changes in understanding and contributing to what we might term meaningful innovation. Because of their diverse and emergent areas of focus these areas of design research have a variety of labels including critical design, speculative design, and propositional design. To contextualize these countervailing directions, this chapter begins with a discussion of the role and nature of design practice in academia. An overview of the historical developments that set the agenda for design in the twentieth century, which still dominates the field in the twenty-first, allows us to better understand the contribution of these new directions in advancing the discipline. The works of several designers are discussed, including examples from the author{\textquoteright}s own academic design practice. These illustrate the kinds of issues being addressed, the relationship between theory and practice, and the roles of creativity, subjectivity, rhetoric and polemic in design research.",
keywords = "Design, Innovation, Sustainability, radical design, critical design, speculative design, propositional design",
author = "Stuart Walker",
year = "2016",
month = jun,
day = "21",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781138780507",
pages = "395--408",
editor = "Penny Sparke and Fiona Fisher",
booktitle = "The Routledge Companion to Design Studies",
publisher = "Routledge",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Design for meaningful innovation

AU - Walker, Stuart

PY - 2016/6/21

Y1 - 2016/6/21

N2 - Design research today is characterized by its focus on technological innovation, especially digital innovation, and on collaborations between university researchers and private or public sector organizations to address practical concerns. In tandem with this direction, funding bodies encourage and often stipulate cross-disciplinary partnerships and look favourably upon projects that contribute to ‘real world’ impact. These widespread practices, however, can be problematic. They tend to endorse, rather than disinterestedly critique, the dominant paradigm, which despite its many material and practical benefits, is highly destructive of the natural environment, deeply inequitable and socially divisive and, on an individual level, associated with a sense of meaninglessness. Also, such intimate involvement of funding bodies in the positioning of academic inquiry can seriously compromise vitally important elements of scholarship, not least critical distance and academic freedom. Despite the difficulties of doing so within this trenchantly instrumental climate, some take a different path, pursuing design studies that critique narrowly framed technological and economic interpretations of progress; business-focused academic research; and the prioritization of ‘impact’ over curiosity-based inquiry. It is a path that offers opportunities for design to address some of the more significant concerns of our age. Over time, such work may be capable of fostering changes in understanding and contributing to what we might term meaningful innovation. Because of their diverse and emergent areas of focus these areas of design research have a variety of labels including critical design, speculative design, and propositional design. To contextualize these countervailing directions, this chapter begins with a discussion of the role and nature of design practice in academia. An overview of the historical developments that set the agenda for design in the twentieth century, which still dominates the field in the twenty-first, allows us to better understand the contribution of these new directions in advancing the discipline. The works of several designers are discussed, including examples from the author’s own academic design practice. These illustrate the kinds of issues being addressed, the relationship between theory and practice, and the roles of creativity, subjectivity, rhetoric and polemic in design research.

AB - Design research today is characterized by its focus on technological innovation, especially digital innovation, and on collaborations between university researchers and private or public sector organizations to address practical concerns. In tandem with this direction, funding bodies encourage and often stipulate cross-disciplinary partnerships and look favourably upon projects that contribute to ‘real world’ impact. These widespread practices, however, can be problematic. They tend to endorse, rather than disinterestedly critique, the dominant paradigm, which despite its many material and practical benefits, is highly destructive of the natural environment, deeply inequitable and socially divisive and, on an individual level, associated with a sense of meaninglessness. Also, such intimate involvement of funding bodies in the positioning of academic inquiry can seriously compromise vitally important elements of scholarship, not least critical distance and academic freedom. Despite the difficulties of doing so within this trenchantly instrumental climate, some take a different path, pursuing design studies that critique narrowly framed technological and economic interpretations of progress; business-focused academic research; and the prioritization of ‘impact’ over curiosity-based inquiry. It is a path that offers opportunities for design to address some of the more significant concerns of our age. Over time, such work may be capable of fostering changes in understanding and contributing to what we might term meaningful innovation. Because of their diverse and emergent areas of focus these areas of design research have a variety of labels including critical design, speculative design, and propositional design. To contextualize these countervailing directions, this chapter begins with a discussion of the role and nature of design practice in academia. An overview of the historical developments that set the agenda for design in the twentieth century, which still dominates the field in the twenty-first, allows us to better understand the contribution of these new directions in advancing the discipline. The works of several designers are discussed, including examples from the author’s own academic design practice. These illustrate the kinds of issues being addressed, the relationship between theory and practice, and the roles of creativity, subjectivity, rhetoric and polemic in design research.

KW - Design

KW - Innovation

KW - Sustainability

KW - radical design

KW - critical design

KW - speculative design

KW - propositional design

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9781138780507

SP - 395

EP - 408

BT - The Routledge Companion to Design Studies

A2 - Sparke, Penny

A2 - Fisher, Fiona

PB - Routledge

CY - Abindgon, Oxford

ER -