111 research outputs found
Designing for emergence and innovation: Redesigning design
We reveal the surprising and counterintuitive truth that the design process, in and
of itself, is not always on the forefront of innovation. Design is a necessary but
not a sufficient condition for the success of new products and services. We
intuitively sense a connection between innovative design and emergence. The
nature of design, emergence and innovation to understand their interrelationships
and interdependencies is examined. We propose that design must harness the
process of emergence; for it is only through the bottom-up and massively
iterative unfolding of emergence that new and improved products and services
are successfully refined, introduced and diffused into the marketplace.
The relationships among design, emergence and innovation are developed.
What designers can learn from nature about emergence and evolution that will
impact the design process is explored. We examine the roles that design and
emergence play in innovation. How innovative organizations can incorporate
emergence into their design process is explored.
We demarcate the boundary between invention and innovation. We also
articulate the similarities and differences of design and emergence. We then
develop the following three hypotheses:
Hypothesis 1: “An innovative design is an emergent design.”
Hypothesis 2: “A homeostatic relationship between design and emergence is a
required condition for innovation.”Hypothesis 3: “Since design is a cultural activity and culture is an emergent
phenomenon, it follows that design leading to innovation is also an emergent
phenomenon”
We provide a number of examples of how design and emergence have worked
together and led to innovation. Examples include the tool making of early man;
the evolutionary chain of the six languages speech, writing, math, science,
computing and the Internet; the Gutenberg printing press and techniques of
collaborative filtering associated with the Internet.
We close by describing the relationship between human and naturally “designed”
systems and the notion a key element of a design is its purpose as is the case
with a living organism
Idle hands are the devil’s tools: The geopolitics and geoeconomics of hunger
In current geopolitical and geoeconomic discourses, hunger is understood as both a threat to be contained, resulting in an often severe social and spatial localization of food insecurity, and a humanitarian problem to be solved through diffuse global flows of food and other aid. The resulting scalar tensions demonstrate the potentially contradictory alignment of geopolitics and geoeconomics within processes of globalization and neoliberalization. This article examines the geopolitical and geoeconomic place of hunger and the hungry through a critical analysis of the food-for-work (FFW) approach to combating hunger. FFW programs distribute food aid in exchange for labor, and have long been used to plan and deliver food aid. While debate continues as to whether and under what conditions FFW programs are socially and economically just, governments, international institutions, and NGOs tout them as a flexible and efficient way to deliver targeted aid, promote community development, and improve long-term prospects for economic development and food security. In the post-9/11 period, FFW programs are also cited as effective deterrents to terrorist recruitment strategies, while development and food security more broadly have been incorporated into national security strategies, especially but not only in the United States. The food-for-work approach attempts to resolve the scalar contradictions of hunger through the imposition of a labor requirement that disciplines the threat of the hungry while enforcing global connection. Case studies of FFW programs in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and Indonesia illustrate this contradiction, and highlight the development and possible future of approaches to hunger under neoliberal geopolitics
From Mexico to Beijing: "Women in Development" Twenty Five Years On
During the past twenty five years the Women in Development (WID)approach has become an increasingly important issue in the literature on Third World development. WID issues and related activities have now been incorporated into the aid practice of most development agencies. This paper critically analyses the diverse and conflicting ideologies that have emerged in the WID literature since the early seventies
Geografie relazionali nella storia del design
Con il tema delle “geografie relazionali” l'intenzione di questo numero è di valorizzare studi e ricerche che assumono approcci tipici delle scienze sociali per la comprensione e la spiegazione del design. Questo, infatti, oltre ad essere fatto di “cose”, strutture materializzate (come la nazione o la comunità), individui e meccanismi, è composto soprattutto di reti e fatti sociali: un insieme intricato e complesso di intersecazioni, rete di flussi e di relazioni..
(Un)becoming women: Indian factory women's counternarratives of gender
This paper portrays the life stories of five factory workers in Delhi whose life trajectories run counter to normative femininity. As daughters and wives, they are neglected, abandoned or rejected by their families; they live alone, with their parents past the age that is their natal right, with siblings, or with families and men who are not related to them. I explore the circulation of their counternarratives and how their gender transgressions go public through ordinary forms of talk, such as gossip and rumor. I argue that their move out of the normative is not produced by, but produces, their gender politics; that their agency emerges cognitively from the telling of their stories in tandem with their interlocutors' credulity and uptake; and that the site of gender politics for working class Indian women lies in the informal subaltern publics that are formed by the circulation of their stories. Contrary to the notion of a stable unitary subject that precedes the political, these women's counternarratives demonstrate the subject‐in‐process as a political effect. Their alterity does not exist outside the heteronormative gender order but demarcates the boundaries of its historicity, hinting at both the internal contradictions of existing gender relations and their future possibilities.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/112196/1/j.1467-954X.2011.02026.x.pd
Industrial Production and Investment in Pakistan
Development in Pakistan so far has been largely sustained by a
rapidly growing industrial sector. From 1953 to 1960, the index for
manufacturing has grown more rapidly in Pakistan than in any other
country for which United-Nations statistics are published, except Japan.
Admittedly, the reliability of such comparisons is limited and the high
rate of Pakistan's industrial growth is partly a function of the low
initial level of industrial development—if you start at zero, any
increase means an infinite rate. But the United-Nations index starts in
the middle 1950's when Pakistan already had a respectable industrial
sector and the statistics are sufficiently reliable so one can say with
some confidence ' that Pakistan had a rate of industrial growth matched
by few countries in the recent past. A reasonably accurate measure of
the growth in industrial production and investment in Pakistan is,
therefore, of particular importance to economic analysis, policy
formulation, or planning. The dynamism of the industrial sector has been
due to what is called " large scale industry ". No reasonably reliable
information exists on value added in "small scale industry", but various
official , and unofficial guesses on its growth rate have ranged from a
decline to a 3.5- per-cent annual increase. There would be
near-universal agreement that "large scale industry" has grown much more
rapidly than "small scale". The Survey, discussed later in this paper,
confirms this conclusion. From 1947 to 1959, the value added by firms
with assets of less than one million rupees increased only five-fold,
while that added by larger firms increased more than fifteen
times
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