ABSTRACT

This new edition of The Routledge Companion to Design Research offers an updated, comprehensive examination of design research, celebrating a plurality of voices and range of conceptual, methodological, technological and theoretical approaches evident in contemporary design research.

This volume comprises thirty-eight original and high-quality design research chapters from contributors around the world, with offerings from the vast array of disciplines in and around modern design praxis, including areas such as industrial and product design, visual communication, interaction design, fashion design, service design, engineering and architecture. The Companion is divided into four distinct sections with chapters that examine the nature and process of design research, the purpose of design research and how one might embark on design research. They also explore how leading design researchers conduct their design research through formulating and asking questions in novel ways, and the creative methods and tools they use to collect and analyse data. The Companion also includes a number of case studies that illustrate how one might best communicate and disseminate design research through contributions that offer techniques for writing and publicising research.

The Routledge Companion to Design Research has a wide appeal to researchers and educators in design and design-related disciplines such as engineering, business, marketing, and computing, and will make an invaluable contribution to state-of-the-art design research at postgraduate, doctoral and post-doctoral levels and teaching across a wide range of different disciplines.

chapter I|119 pages

Exploring design research

The nature and process of design research; the purpose of design research; onto-epistemic perspectives

chapter 4|12 pages

Redesigning design

On pluralizing design

chapter 6|16 pages

Politics of publishing

Exploring decolonial and intercultural frameworks for marginalized publics

chapter II|112 pages

Designing design research

Formulating research questions; conducting literature searches and reviews; developing research plans

chapter 13|11 pages

Respectfully navigating the borderlands towards emergence

Co-designing with Indigenous communities

chapter 15|12 pages

From theory to practice

Equitable approaches to design research in the design thinking process

chapter 16|14 pages

Re-articulating prevailing notions of design

About designing in the absence of sight and other alternative design realities

chapter 18|15 pages

Exploring research space in fashion

A framework for meaning-making

chapter III|139 pages

Conducting design research

Asking questions; data collection methods; analysing information; interpreting findings; ethical issues

chapter 19|14 pages

Drawing out

How designers analyse written texts in visual ways

chapter 23|11 pages

Participation Otherwise

More than southerning the world, designing in movement

chapter 27|13 pages

Software Ate Design

Creation and destruction of value through design research with data

chapter 28|15 pages

Working with patient experience

chapter IV|148 pages

Translating design research

Embarking on transdisciplinary design research, conducting and communicating design research insights, findings, and results effectively; disseminating for impact

chapter 29|12 pages

Physical thinking

Textile making toward transdisciplinary design research

chapter 31|14 pages

Seeing the invisible

Revisiting the value of critical tools in design research for social change

chapter 32|13 pages

Practice-based evidence for social innovation

Working and learning in complexity

chapter 33|17 pages

Collective dreaming through speculative fiction

Developing research worldviews with an interdisciplinary team

chapter 36|10 pages

Probing and filming with strategic results

International design research to explore and refine new product-service concepts

chapter 37|17 pages

Museum in our street

Social cohesion at street level

chapter 38|16 pages

GeoMerce

Speculative relationships between nature, technology and capitalism