Indigenous Principles: Informing Social Design Practice in a Decolonized Framework

Abstract

Social design, as a practice to recognize and mobilize collective agency, aims to promote the use of design methods and tools to create new relations and relink broken connections between social and environmental aspects. It gives people the ability to envision different paths towards the construction of sustainable futures. However, if framed under unequal power dynamics and guided by imposed objectives, social design could be labelled as a neo-colonial practice. This paper explores indigenous knowledge and values and suggests these as an ontological framework to inform social design practices. On one hand, the principles of Buen Vivir, ‘good life’– an indigenous concept enacted by a collective force based on respectful relations and harmonious interconnections between all living forms – have the potential to advise and guide towards an alternative path for a sustainable development. On the other hand, Zapatista principles’ of Buen Gobierno, ‘good government’ – the seven principles inspired by the concept of ‘command by obeying’ establish a democratic political structure based on cooperation, autonomy, and respect – serve as an approach to reconfigure power dynamics and the hierarchical structure of collaboration within communities and design practitioners. Together Buen Vivir and Buen Gobierno provide a better understanding of social and material sensibility. Revising the application of these principles as ongoing experiences allow social designers to reconstruct their knowledge and praxis around decoloniality.

Presenters

Andrea Navarrete Rigo
Student, PhD, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong

Peter Hasdell
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

Design in Society

KEYWORDS

Social design, Buen Vivir, Buen Gobierno, Decoloniality, Neo-colonialism