Designers as change agents in the Circular Economy

Several global reports have concluded that natural resource extraction at its current levels is unsustainable and will lead to the rapid erosion of the environment and tax global economic growth. One of the alternative paradigms to conserve those resources is the Circular Economy, a system driven by...

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Main Author: Katja Fleischmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Art + Design: elearning lab - design for social change, Cyprus University of Technology 2020-01-01
Series:Discern
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.designforsocialchange.org/journal/index.php/DISCERN-J/article/view/10/10
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author Katja Fleischmann
author_facet Katja Fleischmann
author_sort Katja Fleischmann
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description Several global reports have concluded that natural resource extraction at its current levels is unsustainable and will lead to the rapid erosion of the environment and tax global economic growth. One of the alternative paradigms to conserve those resources is the Circular Economy, a system driven by innovation that extends the utility of products as long as possible through a series of strategies that re-use resources.Design can act as a bridging tool and a catalyst for the innovation demanded by the Circular Economy because of its flexibility as a problem-solving discipline.The intermediary role of design can adapt to the complex requirements of Circular Economy stakeholders who want to shift their way of doing business to a more sustainable model, despite formidable policies, economic, cultural and political obstacles. The author explores the evolution and utility of design from a discipline that shapes objects to one that constructs and facilitates complex systems of interactions among collaborators, which in the Circular Economy includes consumers, manufacturers, logistics companies, governments, business and science entrepreneurs.Several examples of design’s role in this facilitative process are presented that showcase the power of design to drive social and cultural transformations and re-cast industrial and business processes. Sustainable innovation is the centrepiece of the Circular Economy and design has a significant role to play in its adoption, particularly from a human-centred perspective that can address formidable constraints to its implementation.
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spelling doaj.art-d53f6e6b0f3f4670a1f0828201c5ce822022-12-21T18:32:40ZengArt + Design: elearning lab - design for social change, Cyprus University of TechnologyDiscern2184-69952020-01-011199118Designers as change agents in the Circular EconomyKatja Fleischmann0Griffith University, Queensland College of Art,Several global reports have concluded that natural resource extraction at its current levels is unsustainable and will lead to the rapid erosion of the environment and tax global economic growth. One of the alternative paradigms to conserve those resources is the Circular Economy, a system driven by innovation that extends the utility of products as long as possible through a series of strategies that re-use resources.Design can act as a bridging tool and a catalyst for the innovation demanded by the Circular Economy because of its flexibility as a problem-solving discipline.The intermediary role of design can adapt to the complex requirements of Circular Economy stakeholders who want to shift their way of doing business to a more sustainable model, despite formidable policies, economic, cultural and political obstacles. The author explores the evolution and utility of design from a discipline that shapes objects to one that constructs and facilitates complex systems of interactions among collaborators, which in the Circular Economy includes consumers, manufacturers, logistics companies, governments, business and science entrepreneurs.Several examples of design’s role in this facilitative process are presented that showcase the power of design to drive social and cultural transformations and re-cast industrial and business processes. Sustainable innovation is the centrepiece of the Circular Economy and design has a significant role to play in its adoption, particularly from a human-centred perspective that can address formidable constraints to its implementation.https://www.designforsocialchange.org/journal/index.php/DISCERN-J/article/view/10/10circular economydesign-led innovationservice designcitizen designersustainable innovationdemocratisation of designco-creation
spellingShingle Katja Fleischmann
Designers as change agents in the Circular Economy
Discern
circular economy
design-led innovation
service design
citizen designer
sustainable innovation
democratisation of design
co-creation
title Designers as change agents in the Circular Economy
title_full Designers as change agents in the Circular Economy
title_fullStr Designers as change agents in the Circular Economy
title_full_unstemmed Designers as change agents in the Circular Economy
title_short Designers as change agents in the Circular Economy
title_sort designers as change agents in the circular economy
topic circular economy
design-led innovation
service design
citizen designer
sustainable innovation
democratisation of design
co-creation
url https://www.designforsocialchange.org/journal/index.php/DISCERN-J/article/view/10/10
work_keys_str_mv AT katjafleischmann designersaschangeagentsinthecirculareconomy