In an era when the world is facing unprecedented challenges, there is an increasing focus on reassessing and reshaping the role of design in society (Escobar, 2018; Akama, 2019). This seminar series opens up the opportunity to dive deep into the fields of service design (Mager, 2009), regeneration (Fullerton, 2019), and design for degrowth (Hickel, 2020) to shape much needed change.
Why is this seminar series relevant in the context of design?
Design has the ability to significantly influence how we interact with our environment and how our society functions. In the face of growing environmental problems, social inequalities, and economic challenges, it is critical that designers use their skills to develop regenerative systems. This seminar series asks how creative design activities can help shape a sustainable future (and how they currently do not do so sufficiently).
What will be taught and explored in this seminar series?
In this interactive seminar series, participants not only gain theoretical knowledge, but also participate in hands-on workshops to critically reflect on how the design process might adapt in the face of a changing world (from human-centered to life-centered design). A deeper understanding of the interrelationships between between design, society, and the environment will be developed, and experiments will be conducted on how to integrate these insights into projects. The seminar series will not only draw attention to current challenges, but also discuss ways in which design can actively contribute to transformation by considering regenerative economic models such as Doughnut Economics (Raworth, 2017).
Julia Schaeper is a service design and innovation strategist with more than 15 years of work experience (including Engine Service Design, NHS, Idea Couture, Livework, Adidas), Julia fosters an innovation-driven culture within organizations and helps them develop an innovation mindset focused on continuous development and creativity.
Julia has deep expertise in healthcare and has focused much of her work on improving health outcomes through design and empowering people to live healthier lives. With her current research focus on planetary health, she links insights about human needs to not only business but also regenerative goals to help organizations address the profound challenges of our time.
A final year PhD student at the University of the Arts, London, Julia is researching the contribution of service design practices to planetary health and regenerative business models. She holds master’s degrees from the Glasgow School of Art, École Nationale Supérieure de Création Industrielle in Paris, and Konstfack University College of Arts, Craft and Design in Stockholm. Julia has won international design awards and lectures on service design both in Europe and around the world.