ABSTRACT

Rooted in the places, cultures, histories, and wisdom of the diverse Asia-Pacific region, this book gathers heterogeneous practices of designing social innovation that address various social, political, and environmental challenges.

In contrast to dominant notions of design from the Global North that evolved through industrialisation and modernist thinking, the examples in this book speak to designing that is embodied, relational, temporal, ontological, and entangled deeply with ecologies. This edited volume shares rich and detailed stories from Aotearoa New Zealand, Cambodia, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Samoa, Thailand, Vanuatu and a continent now called Australia, that offer honest and critical reflections from practitioners and scholars on designing social innovation. Contributors explore issues of ethics, politics, and positionality in their work. This book highlights the importance of respecting multiple knowledge streams, worldviews, and practices situated in a place. This then supports a plurality of designing social innovation. In all, this book offers ways to sharpen focus on entangled pluralities as a central condition for designing. It is a contribution of hope and inspiration that are becoming more urgently needed in the volatile uncertainties of this world.

This book will be of interest to scholars working in social innovation, service design, social design, participatory design, design anthropology, and Asian studies.

chapter 1|20 pages

Introduction

Inter-related worldviews of designing social innovation

part Section 1|53 pages

Plural ontologies

part Section 2|71 pages

Entangled relationalities

chapter 7|21 pages

Calling on “aunties” and “nieces”

Empowering women in creative sectors in Southeast Asia through designing mentorship

chapter 8|13 pages

Dynamics of power and participation

Lessons from Cambodia and Thailand

chapter 9|18 pages

Relationships matter

The role of family-like bonds and interdependency in designing social innovation practices

part Section 3|73 pages

Enabling practices

chapter 10|10 pages

Tikanga-led design

Whānau-led innovation for systems transformation

chapter 11|11 pages

Design tools for the pluriverse

Proposals for designing public services

chapter 14|10 pages

Uncovering tracks

Towards conscious, embodied international development practice in the Pacific

chapter 15|19 pages

Learning to see oneself, in community

An inquiry into what makes collaborative design come alive within a community in Myanmar