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Learning from Traditional Practices and Products in India to inform Design for Sustainability

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

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Learning from Traditional Practices and Products in India to inform Design for Sustainability. / Changede, Sejal; Thomas, Lisa; Walker, Stuart.
2021. Paper presented at Fifteenth International Conference on Design Principles and Practices, Monterrey, Mexico.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Harvard

Changede, S, Thomas, L & Walker, S 2021, 'Learning from Traditional Practices and Products in India to inform Design for Sustainability', Paper presented at Fifteenth International Conference on Design Principles and Practices, Monterrey, Mexico, 3/03/21 - 5/03/21.

APA

Changede, S., Thomas, L., & Walker, S. (2021). Learning from Traditional Practices and Products in India to inform Design for Sustainability. Paper presented at Fifteenth International Conference on Design Principles and Practices, Monterrey, Mexico.

Vancouver

Changede S, Thomas L, Walker S. Learning from Traditional Practices and Products in India to inform Design for Sustainability. 2021. Paper presented at Fifteenth International Conference on Design Principles and Practices, Monterrey, Mexico.

Author

Changede, Sejal ; Thomas, Lisa ; Walker, Stuart. / Learning from Traditional Practices and Products in India to inform Design for Sustainability. Paper presented at Fifteenth International Conference on Design Principles and Practices, Monterrey, Mexico.

Bibtex

@conference{0f6dd4fd22ce430fa5b6b058ea91633a,
title = "Learning from Traditional Practices and Products in India to inform Design for Sustainability",
abstract = "Mainstream design approaches to developing more sustainable ways of living are often underpinned by the very modern values that have been instrumental in creating our unsustainable world. These values include those of consumerism, economic growth, efficiency and technological optimism – exemplified by mainstream Triple Bottom Line approaches, including the popular Circular Economy concept. Mounting criticism however suggests that such approaches are unlikely to lead to the scale of change required due to the emphasis they place on modern capitalist values. This paper is concerned with the nature of the products emerging from these approaches as these products often embody the aforementioned modern values, which can engender unsustainable practices by the end-user. The paper presents initial findings from an ongoing research project that examines what Design for Sustainability can learn from traditional products and practices that are not underpinned by modern, capitalist values. To do this, a range of traditional products and practices from India that are still in widespread use today are compared with their modern equivalents. The traditional products and practices from India were selected for their positive physical, emotional and/or spiritual relationship with the environment. From this comparison, key features of the Indian products and practices are drawn out that are transferable to contemporary product design. We conclude that these key features can inform the development of contemporary products that address sustainability in a more comprehensive and holistic manner than is currently the case.",
author = "Sejal Changede and Lisa Thomas and Stuart Walker",
year = "2021",
month = mar,
day = "3",
language = "English",
note = "Fifteenth International Conference on Design Principles and Practices : Towards a (design) new deal, Design Principles and Practices ; Conference date: 03-03-2021 Through 05-03-2021",
url = "https://designprinciplesandpractices.com/2021-conference",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Learning from Traditional Practices and Products in India to inform Design for Sustainability

AU - Changede, Sejal

AU - Thomas, Lisa

AU - Walker, Stuart

N1 - Conference code: 15

PY - 2021/3/3

Y1 - 2021/3/3

N2 - Mainstream design approaches to developing more sustainable ways of living are often underpinned by the very modern values that have been instrumental in creating our unsustainable world. These values include those of consumerism, economic growth, efficiency and technological optimism – exemplified by mainstream Triple Bottom Line approaches, including the popular Circular Economy concept. Mounting criticism however suggests that such approaches are unlikely to lead to the scale of change required due to the emphasis they place on modern capitalist values. This paper is concerned with the nature of the products emerging from these approaches as these products often embody the aforementioned modern values, which can engender unsustainable practices by the end-user. The paper presents initial findings from an ongoing research project that examines what Design for Sustainability can learn from traditional products and practices that are not underpinned by modern, capitalist values. To do this, a range of traditional products and practices from India that are still in widespread use today are compared with their modern equivalents. The traditional products and practices from India were selected for their positive physical, emotional and/or spiritual relationship with the environment. From this comparison, key features of the Indian products and practices are drawn out that are transferable to contemporary product design. We conclude that these key features can inform the development of contemporary products that address sustainability in a more comprehensive and holistic manner than is currently the case.

AB - Mainstream design approaches to developing more sustainable ways of living are often underpinned by the very modern values that have been instrumental in creating our unsustainable world. These values include those of consumerism, economic growth, efficiency and technological optimism – exemplified by mainstream Triple Bottom Line approaches, including the popular Circular Economy concept. Mounting criticism however suggests that such approaches are unlikely to lead to the scale of change required due to the emphasis they place on modern capitalist values. This paper is concerned with the nature of the products emerging from these approaches as these products often embody the aforementioned modern values, which can engender unsustainable practices by the end-user. The paper presents initial findings from an ongoing research project that examines what Design for Sustainability can learn from traditional products and practices that are not underpinned by modern, capitalist values. To do this, a range of traditional products and practices from India that are still in widespread use today are compared with their modern equivalents. The traditional products and practices from India were selected for their positive physical, emotional and/or spiritual relationship with the environment. From this comparison, key features of the Indian products and practices are drawn out that are transferable to contemporary product design. We conclude that these key features can inform the development of contemporary products that address sustainability in a more comprehensive and holistic manner than is currently the case.

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - Fifteenth International Conference on Design Principles and Practices

Y2 - 3 March 2021 through 5 March 2021

ER -