Great to see so many familiar faces at the RSA meeting last night.
For those who couldn't make it, the discussion centred on the future of the summer school.
Tim O'Brien, Alistair Hall, Chris Wise and Ed McCann all spoke about previous summer schools; and Emily Campbell, the RSA's new Director of Design, asked us to consider the future, particularly how the school might fit into the RSA's
Design and Society programme, which is explained below:
"Contemporary society needs to be more resourceful; its citizens more engaged, self-reliant and collective in their striving. Just as professionalisation and bureaucracy have reduced our resources of common competence, so our consumption has diminished the earth's resources. As citizens we are less resourceful than ever with fewer resources of energy andnatural material at our disposal.
The particular resourcefulness of designers - their readiness to improvise and prototype, their bravery in the face of disorder and complexity, their holistic and people-centred approach to defining problems - has a critical role to play today in making society itself more resourceful.
The RSA has vigorously supported design since it emerged as a professional discipline in the early 20th century. Design & Society continues to recognise the formal judgement traditionally associated with design, and to celebrate design’s essential optimism with respect to progress and change. We now urge designers to demonstrate how the insights and processes of design can increase the resourcefulness of people and communities.
Design & Society responds to three urgent challenges in particular. How can the benefits of design be extended beyond the world's wealthy to everyone? How should we design so that we can all consume less? How can design help people navigate an increasingly complex world? Design and Society is developing as a programme of design research, public engagement projects, lectures and debates, public competitions and student awards conceived in close collaboration with the RSA’s other Project teams and with the RSA Fellowship."
If you came along and have any further thoughts, or couldn't make it but would like to let us know what you think, just
drop us a line.