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American Association of Geographers, New York City, Feb 24th-28th 2012
http://www.aag.org/cs/annualmeeting

 Session Proposal/Call for Papers:

*Design, Design Activism and the Democratic Production of Future Social
Natures
*
Session Organizers:

Damian White (The Rhode Island School of Design);

Cameron Tonkinwise, (Parsons, The New School for Design).

David Harvey’s* Space of Hope* (2000) suggests that there is a desperate
need in critical geography and critical theory to return to small, medium
and large scale reconstructive visions so as to envisage alternative
productions of social natures. Design - as a deeply materialist, agential
and often utopian social practice, could play an important role in this
discussion. Yet, *Spaces of Hope* tends to read the history of design
primarily as the history of technocratic and ‘design fix’ modes of thinking.
Progressive and working class traditions of social design (as championed by
Colin Ward and others) tend to be sidelined. Little attention is given to
traditions of ‘liberatory design’ as advocated by Bookchin or Illich or the
increased interweaving between design activism and ‘rights to the city’
discussions. Indeed, design ultimately plays a minimal role in Harvey vision
of an alternative future. In contrast to Harvey, Bruno Latour (2008) has
recently argued in more open ended ways that in a ‘made world’, a social
politics of design could potentially become central to the materialization
of the parliament of things and the politics of social nature. Design, it is
argued could play a central role in ‘making *things *public’. Such interests
in possible points of engagement between design, art, the politics of space
and the politics of making have indeed have become central to the thinking
of Doreen Massey, Nigel Thrift, and Matthais Gross and many others of late.


 In this session we would like to consider the genuine tensions as well as
possibilities that design activism and the idea of social design politics
generates for a politics of space and possibly a new politics of the
environment. Modernist design has always been centrally linked to the
consumer economy and technocratic modes of thinking. Nevertheless, it could
be observed that in contrast to the maudlin and exhausted feel of much
radical left and green politics, the interface between design and diverse
struggles for social, spatial and environmental justice and appears
relatively buoyant, optimistic about the progressive potential for human
agency and imbued with a sense of possibility about the opportunities for
'remaking reality'. How can we politically evaluate the new design activism?
Could a new social and democratic politics of design –beyond technocratic
and reductive ‘design fix’ modes of thinking - provide some kind of material
substance to a new progressive politics of the environment? Could historical
and contemporary engagements with design bring real content to the endlessly
iterated but materially unsubstantiated and institutionally vague request in
political ecology for a ‘democratic politics of nature’ (Smith, 1984; Braun
and Castree,1998, Swyngedowu, 1996/2004)? Could a focus on design and the
‘politics of making’ add material content to the suggestive but often
decorative and rather exclusive feel to the politics advocated by a-modern
and post human geographers (Barry, 2001; Whatmore 2003; Thrift 2004;
Hinchliffe,2010)?

This session will explore how geographers, radical artist/designers, design
theorists and other fellow travelers can find productive and critical ways
to engage with any of the following topics:

(i) explorations of the utopian and dystopian geographies of historical and
contemporary modes of eco-design and design activism –from counterculture
ventures to contemporary forms of community design and architecture;
(ii) examples and discussions of urban social movements and eco-urban social
movements and other design activist movements that have productively
transformed or helped rethink the relationship between the built
environment, diverse ecologies, non humans and democracy;
(iii) sociological and geographical explorations of phenomena like the
Transition Towns movement and forms of design politics/activism motivated by
fetishized dystopia-avoidance;
(iv) implications for spatial, social and environmental  justice of the new
politics of design based on scenario based design; shareability.net; living
labs; community design; the utopian possibilities of design beyond the
object; ‘rights to the city’ activism;
(v) reflections on the relationships between design, design activism, the
construction of democratic experiments (eg:Latour/Stengers/Gross) and ideas
of alternative hedonism/the new politics of pleasure (Kate Soper);
(vi) historical and contemporary reflections on potential relations between
the field of design, the writings of radical design theorists such as Tony
Fry, John Thackara, Victor Margolin etc and discussions in geography around
'the democratic production of nature' and the politics of posthumanism
a/modernism.


 Format: A paper based session consisting of 15 minute papers to leave time
for discussion.

Please submit an abstract of c200-250 words together with the title of their
proposed paper and the names and affiliation of authors not later than
September 14th 2011 to:


 Session Organizers:

Damian White, Associate Professor of Sociology, The Rhode Island School of
Design; 2 College Building, Providence, Rhode Island 02903-0480, USA,
[log in to unmask]; 434-202-9159


 Cameron Tonkinwise Associate Dean for Sustainability, Parsons, The New
School for Design, 72 Fifth Ave, NY 10011.USA [log in to unmask], 1 212
229 5321 ext 3416.

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