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Resumo(s)
The term sustainability has been increasingly used to communicate emerging issues in our world, and with this comes a growing number of interventions using agendas and objectives to improve social, economic and environmental development. Among the various lines of thought and authors who address the issue, specifically within Design, Social Design emerges, aimed at meeting the needs of individuals as part of a whole, moving away from individual and industrial issues, thinking about the collective and the problems that cross the complex layers of today's society. From this point of view, the aim of this work is to enter into and understand communications about sustainable development in current times, in particular how sustainability values reach peripheral communities, which are often neglected in this discourse, delving into their characteristics and recognizing the peripheral subject, thus referencing the importance of what is already being discussed on the subject in these territories. In order to understand this process, a qualitative methodology was used which included three stages: exploratory - with a literature review and analysis of what is discussed about peripheries, peripheral subjects, sustainability and social design; generative - entering the territory with a case study and interacting with the subjects present in it (with interviews and qualitative surveys) and a Social Design workshop; evaluative - critical reflection based on discourses (communication) and individual and collective practices, based on the analysis and cross-referencing of the knowledge generated by the exploratory and generative stages and validated based on the guidance of a panel of experts. As a conclusion to her dissertation, the researcher challenges the conventional, global north-based epistemic perspective on what sustainability and sustainable development are, emphasizing the role of Social Design as a vehicle for alternative - local and ancestral - voices and perspectives on sustainable development to be heard in the academic space.
Descrição
Palavras-chave
Design social Desenvolvimento sustentável Periferia Comunicação Sustentabilidade
