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Design for social sustainability: Using digital fabrication in the humanitarian and development sector

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Change log

Authors

Moultrie, J 

Abstract

jats:pThe demand for humanitarian and development aid has risen to an unprecedented level in recent years. With a pressing need for new solutions, designers have started using digital fabrication (3D printing, CNC milling and laser cutting) to produce life-saving items. However, many organisations are failing to create the impacts they desire, and the social aspect of sustainability has been largely overlooked. This paper addresses this gap in knowledge by investigating guidelines for Design for Social Sustainability, specifically looking at digital fabrication for humanitarian and development projects. Building on existing literature and conducting three in-depth case studies of healthcare related products, the research develops a framework for Design for Social Sustainability. It provides useful guidelines to help plan and evaluate digital fabrication projects in the humanitarian and development sector. The findings show how design can trigger social sustainability at product, process and paradigm levels. Specifically, the case studies reveal the potential for digital fabrication to lead to more systems-focused, radical social sustainability. The paper concludes that an iterative and holistic approach to Design for Sustainability is needed, that begins by examining the social dimension first.</jats:p>

Description

Keywords

social sustainability, digital fabrication, 3D printing, humanitarian, development, design for sustainability

Journal Title

Sustainability (Switzerland)

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1937-0709
2071-1050

Volume Title

11

Publisher

MDPI AG
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/L504920/1)
Funded by UK EPSRC Doctoral Training Programme, grant number EP/L504920/1 and School of Technology Travel Award, University of Cambridge, UK.