Collaborative Social Design with Mexican Indigenous Communities

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A01=Carmen Malvar
Anthropology
Artifact Production
Artifact Task Cycle
Artisan Communities
Author_Carmen Malvar
Category=AK
Category=GLZ
Category=GTP
Category=JBCC
Category=JHMC
collaborative design research Mexico
community engagement strategies
Craft
Critical Craft
Cultural studies
decolonial methodologies
Decolonizing design
Design Practitioners
Design Workshop
DIF
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic fieldwork
Ethnography
Exploratory Visits
Facilitator Team
Future Workshops
Hold
Indigeneity
Indigenous Communities
indigenous knowledge systems
Market Exposure
Martin
Mexico
Mutual Correspondence
Oaxaca City
Oaxaca De Juarez
Oral Histories
Oral Workshops
participatory design
pre-Columbian
Previous Workshops
Social Design
Spanish Language
sustainable craft practices
Sustainable development
Textile Museum
Textile Sample

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032420134
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Mar 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book builds on the work of anthropologists, designers, and ethnographers to develop an original methodology and framework for indigenous engagement and designer/non-designer collaboration in the field of social design.

Following a collaborative case study conducted over a five-year period between the author, project team, and indigenous artisans in Mexico, the book outlines the practical challenges of design research, including funding, logistics, relationships between designers and communities, failures, successes, and pivots. Social design literature has often focused on introducing important questions to the design research process, but fails to deeply interrogate and demonstrate how these theories inform research projects in action, which can then be open to misinterpretation, bias, and unintended harmful consequences. Centering the indigenous communities, this book provides a detailed and clear example of not just why, but how design and designers can work authentically and responsibly through different approaches and systems. The book examines the specific cultural, epistemological and socio-political history of Mexico as it relates to colonization and indigenous peoples, exploring the systemic influences of globalization and grounding the research in its unique context. It includes field notes, conversations with the indigenous artisan communities, workshops and prototypes to offer unique insight into a detailed, collaborative social design initiative.

This book intersects with the growing awareness of the necessity of decolonial approaches to design across the world and will be an important and useful study for academics, students and researchers in social design, sustainable development, cultural studies and anthropology.

Carmen Malvar holds a PhD in social design, is a member of the international GIS research group for Retail and Service Futures as part of the Design Research Society (DRS) and collaborator with the UNESCO Chair of Sustainability Barcelona with 20 years of experience on leading teamwork based on design practice. Carmen has worked on projects developed with indigenous communities in the highlands of México and is currently researching the social and ecological impact of some global industries and their backstage production, designing and implementing strategies where their production process and distribution chain shares the concern with stakeholders and the community. She is the founder of CADA Foundation, a platform for understanding cultural heritage through social design. Carmen works regularly as a consultant and speaker for various institutions, local governments, foundations, and academia.

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