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The Corruption of Co-Design: Political and Social Conflicts in Participatory Design Thinking

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Designers are often depicted as social change agents that serve the good in the world. Similarly, co-design tends to be described as a democratic mode of creativity that is somehow beyond reproach. But is change a virtue in itself, and do participatory practices always produce socially beneficial outcomes?

Such questions are becoming more pressing as co-design has emerged as a dominant practice in planning and urban design, while also informing corporate management and public administration. In this book, Otto von Busch and Karl Palm�s suggest that designers tend to overemphasize the place of ideals in design, leaving them ill-equipped to deal with a social world of power-wielding and zero-sum games. Seeking to reorient the concerns of the Scandinavian tradition of participatory design, they suggest that co-design processes are rife with betrayals, decay, and corruption, and that designerly empathy has morphed into a new form of cunning statecraft.

In putting forward Realdesign as an alternative conception of design practice, von Busch and Palm�s ask: What hard lessons about the social must today's designers learn from realists like Machiavelli?

136 pages, ebook

Published February 1, 2023

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Otto von Busch

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46 reviews13 followers
March 31, 2024
A decent book with some good insights. It took two readings to appreciate some of the more hard to penetrate ideas re. Greek terms and some of the urban design examples felt difficult to parse into digital design but that's reasonable.
17 reviews3 followers
June 8, 2023
Perspective changing around those in power, and their ability to assimilate solutions that once attempted to boot them from power.
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