HIGHLIGHTS
SUMMARY
Critical and participatory design practices consider design`s potential and capacity as a tool for social change, imbricating design in explicitly political contexts of collective action, grassroots organizing, and social movements relevant to policy change. Whilst not solely consultative, the predominant understanding and practice of design for policy establishes and mediates public problems from the standpoint of the government body addressing those problems, with no evidence of how it can boost bottom-up processes (Giraldo Nohra, Pereno, and Barbero 2020). The authors argue design can support the strategic framing of public issues affecting their . . .
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