Designers, Users and Justice

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2017-04-06
Publisher(s): Bloomsbury Academic
List Price: $120.00

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Summary

How do we design for users? How might users best participate in the design process? How can we evaluate the user's experience of designed products and services? These fundamental questions are addressed in Designers, Users, and Justice, through a series of dialogues between a design scholar and a designer. In a series of conversations, the scholar and the designer address the concepts and practice of user centred design, examining whether a 'just method' necessarily leads to a just design, consider different models for understanding user experience and socially productive design, including the capability approach and utilitarianism, and ponder how an ethical framework for evaluating design might be developed.

Throughout, the scholar and the designer draw on their particular experiences in design practice and design education, and propose alternative conceptualisations of the key ideas of user centred design, highlighting and seeking to address the ethical shortcomings of mainstream user centred design practice.

Author Biography

Turkka Keinonen is Professor of Design at Aalto University, Finland.

Table of Contents

Preface
1. User Needs as Design Tools
2. Does a Just Method Produce A Just Design?
3. How Do We Measure Useability And The User's Experience?
4. Useability and the Capability Approach
5. User Experience and Utilitarianism
6. Developing an Ethical Framework for Evaluating Design.
7. Design for Equality
8. Conclusion: How We Develop and Evaluate 'Just' Design
References
Index

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