ABSTRACT

Design impacts every part of our lives. The design of products and services influences the way we go about our daily activities and it is hard to imagine any activity in our daily lives that is not dependent on design in some capacity. Clothing, mobile phones, computers, cars, tools and kitchenware all enable and hold in place everyday practices. Despite design’s omnipresence, the understanding of how design may facilitate desirable behaviours is still fragmented, with limited frameworks and examples of how design can effect change in professional and public contexts.

This text presents an overview of current approaches dedicated to understanding how design may be used intentionally to make changes to improve a range of problematic social and environmental issues. It offers a cross-disciplinary and cross-sectoral overview of different academic theories adopted and applied to design for behaviour change.

The aim of the volume is twofold: firstly, to provide an overview of existing design models that integrate theories of change from differing scientific backgrounds; secondly, to offer an overview of application of key design for behaviour change approaches as used across case studies in different sectors, such as design for health and wellbeing, sustainability, safety, design against crime and social design. Design for Behaviour Change will appeal to designers, design students and practitioners of behavioural change.

part 1|15 pages

Design for behaviour change

part 2|141 pages

Models, methods and tools for design for behaviour change

chapter 4|14 pages

The Product Impact Tool

The case of the Dutch public transport chip card

chapter 8|11 pages

Design for healthy behaviour

chapter 10|12 pages

Practices-oriented design

chapter 11|10 pages

Futuring and ontological designing

chapter 12|12 pages

The hidden influence of design

part 3|102 pages

Applying design for behaviour change

chapter 14|5 pages

Design for behaviour change

Introducing five areas of application and related case studies

part 4|12 pages

The current state and future of design for behaviour change

chapter 21|4 pages

Conclusion