Design, Oppression, and Liberation

The role of design in structuring oppression has gone largely unacknowl­edged by design research and design history. However, we can see a recent move, pushed by social movements, to recognize design’s complicity with many forms of oppression. Acknowledging oppressive design opens up the possibilit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Frederick van Amstel, Lesley-Ann Noel, Rodrigo Freese Gonzatto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile 2022-09-01
Series:Diseña
Online Access:https://ojs.lib.uc.cl/index.php/Disena/article/view/53601
Description
Summary:The role of design in structuring oppression has gone largely unacknowl­edged by design research and design history. However, we can see a recent move, pushed by social movements, to recognize design’s complicity with many forms of oppression. Acknowledging oppressive design opens up the possibility of occu­pying, reclaiming, repairing, and restoring what oppressors have done with it. Some approaches shift design research from denouncing to announcing new realities. Without doing so, fatalism could prevail, even if critical of the current reality. In the case of design, this means putting equal effort on analyzing oppressive designs and on developing liberating designs. In tune with this implication, this special issue highlights research that contributes to both sharpening the understanding of oppression in design, and increasing the solidarity between the different struggles for liberation that cut across design.
ISSN:0718-8447
2452-4298