This document discusses social design programs and practices. It explores definitions of social design and questions what it means to study social design. It presents perspectives on social design being a "playground" for creating small changes rather than healing the world. The document also examines indigenous social practices in Colombia like minga, trueque, and manocambiada. It profiles socially engaged design projects and organizations in Colombia including the work of Antanas Mockus and Centro Experimental Las Gaviotas.
6. MFA Social Design
MFA Social Design - Arts as Urban Innovation
MFA Design - Social Design specialization
7. !MPACT Design for Social Change (6 week program)
MFA Design for Social Innovation
MFA Design - Social Design
MDes Social Design
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17. WHAT DOES IT MEAN, THEN, TO STUDY A
PROGRAM CALLED SOCIAL DESIGN?
18. DO YOU STUDY SOCIAL DESIGN TO BECOME A
SOCIAL DESIGNER?
19. “Man and Humanity is the entire world and much more. At the same time, it also is a
projection to the Third world, of which I – being a Belgian with our Congo trauma - don’t
believe that we can live up to that suggestion from this academy. If we were able to
live up to it, I truly wonder if It would be anything else than a way to get rid of our guilt,
instead of actually trying to solve things.
I choose a less ambitious principle. Social Design is a kind of playground for which
everyone will have his own definition of course, but it is a work field within which you can
easily define a cluster of definitions and concepts. We’re not planning on healing the
world, but we can change it a little bit. Moving a small rock in the river is a great start”
A CRITICAL DIALOGUE. Interview with Jan Boelen. 2012
22. “When I speak about dialogical design, I do not only refer to a set of skills or a way of
working, but it defines my practice in a broader sense. With this, I mean that the dialogue
is not only process, but also result; just not a final result, but a series of temporary results
that would always loop back in the process (a conclusion we came up with Jeanne van
Heeswijk during a conversation). This makes my projects a never-ending process of
producing, making things public, reflecting and looping back into production. This never-ending
process does not lead to “an outcome”, but to an on-going collection of content,
which functions as a radiography of the project in a specific moment”
IT IS WHAT IT IS. Master thesis Pablo Calderón Salazar. 2013.
52. “I think with Manuel you can move forward in great ways, in what you propose to
yourselves; he has a great talent and a great attitude to confront challenges, even when
they exceed the onirical parameters… From my point of view, this is the findamental
aspect when undertaking any process, having in mind that the result of a good dinner
for friends does not depend exclusively on the recipe, but on the disposition and the
generosity to wash the dishes”