Table of Contents
Foreword
Clive Dilnot, independent, USA
Introduction – Design's Tricky Ethics
Tom Fisher, Nottingham Trent, UK and Lorraine Gamman, University of the Arts London, UK
Section One, Tricky Thinging
Chapter 1: Civilian and Military: Design Across an Ethical Horizon
Tom Fisher, Nottingham Trent University, UK
Chapter 2: Designers and Brokers of the Mobility Regime
Mahmoud Kesharvarz, Uppsala University, Sweden
Chapter 3: Trickery in Design: Cooptation, Subversion and Politics
Nidhi Srinavas, Parsons School of Design, USA and Eduardo Staszowski, Parsons School of Design, USA
Chapter 4: Guns and morality: Mediation, Agency and Responsibility
Tim Dant, Lancaster University, UK
Chapter 5: The Magic that is Design
Cameron Tonkinwise, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Section Two: Tricky Processes, Tricky Principles
Chapter 6: Designer/Shapeshifter: A De-colonial Redirection for Speculative and Critical Design
Luiza Prado de O. Martins, A Parede, Germany and Pedro J. S. Vieira de Oliveira, A Parede, Germany
Chapter 7: Making 'Safety', Making Freedom: Design and Contested Futures
Shana Agid, Parsons School of Design, USA
Chapter 8: The Nature of 'Obligation' in Doing Design with Communities: Participation, Politics and Care
Ann Light, University of Sussex, UK and Yoko Akama, RMIT University, USA
Section Three: Tricky Policy
Chapter 9: Designing Policy Objects: Designer as Anti-Hero
Lucy Kimbell, University of the Arts London, UK
Chapter 10: Tricky like a Leprachaun – Navigating the Paradoxes of Public Service Innovation
Adam Thorpe, University of the Arts London, UK
Chapter 11: Understanding Suicide and Assisted Dying – Why “Design for Death” is Tricky
Lorraine Gamman, University of the Arts London, UK and Pras Gunasekera, University of the Arts London, UK
Chapter 12: The Quest for Purity, 'Clean' Design and a New Ethics of 'Dirty' Design
Jeremy Kidwell, University of Birmingham UK
Conclusion
Tom Fisher, Nottingham Trent, UK and Lorraine Gamman, University of the Arts London, UK