Contributeurs
Diego Giovanni BermÚdez Aguirre is the cover
designer for DesignIssues 28:1 (Hiver 2012.) He is a
professor at the Pontifica Universidad Javeriana in Cali,
Colombia. He has lectured and led studios in a number
of countries and has shown his posters in many parts
of the world. His design work has been selected for
various books including Latin American Graphic Design
and Index (2008). He authored A Method of Design of
Social Posters from Latin America. He is also a member
of the Scientific Council of the review I+Diseño,
published by the University of Málaga.
Lara Allison received her PhD from Columbia
University in the City of New York in 2009. Her major
field of research is twentieth century art, architecture
and design, and her minor field is Sub-Saharan
African Art. Her specific research interests focus on the
institutional absorption of European avant-garde art
and design in the United States during the 1930s, 1940s,
and 1950s in the context of advertising, corporate
conception, and museum practices. Lara is currently an
adjunct professor at Columbia College Chicago.
Anne Boddington is CETLD Director, Dean of Faculty
of Arts, University of Brighton and Co-Director of the
Higher Education Academy’s National Subject Centre
for Art Design and Media (ADM HEA). Educated as
an architect and later as a cultural geographer, Anne
Boddington leads a Faculty of approximately 3,900
students and an academic portfolio that includes the
Visual and Performing Arts Architecture, Design,
Médias, Literature, Languages and Humanities.
Tracy Bergstrom is a special collections librarian
and the curator of graphic design collections at the
University of Notre Dame Libraries. Her research
examines how the physical manifestation of a text in
print affects a reader’s interpretation of its content.
Her areas of interest include fine press printing, artists’
livres, and the print history of Dante’s Divine Comedy.
Bahar Emgin studied Industrial Product Design at
Istanbul Technical University and received her BSc
degree in 2006. She completed her Master’s Degree
at Izmir University of Economics in Design Studies
program in 2008 with her thesis entitled ID-Entity in
Question: Turkish Touch in Design in ‘ilk’ in Milano. Elle
is currently a PhD candidate at Bilkent University
Department of Graphic Design where she continues
research on her dissertation entitled “Servant Princess”
of the Modern Home: Domesticity in Turkey after
Electrification.
John S. Gero is a Research Professor in the Krasnow
Institute for Advanced Study and in the Department
of Computational Social Science at George Mason
University. Formerly, he was Professor of Design
Science and Co-Director of the Key Centre of Design
Computing and Cognition, at the University of
Sydney. He is the author or editor of 50 books and
over 600 papers and book chapters in the fields
of design science, design computing, artificial
intelligence, computer-aided design, conception
cognition and cognitive science.
Andrew Grantham is Senior Research Fellow at the
Centre for Research in Innovation Management,
Brighton Business School at the University of Brighton
in the UK. His current research interest is in design
théorie, tools and innovation. This complements his
recent work investigating the creative processes of
firms in the videogames industry. More broadly, il
has expertise in continuous improvement, intellectuel
property searching and management, social media,
action research, and mobile commerce infrastructures
and applications. His PhD was a study of the
privatization process of the UK rail industry 1992-96.
En plus, he teaches Strategy at Brighton
Business School.
Mike Hobday is Professor of Innovation Management
and Head of Centre for Research in Innovation
Management (CENTRIM) at Brighton University –
one of the world’s leading institutes in innovation
management research. He has led many research
projects, including innovation and design and the role
of projects in bringing about innovation. Mike is the
author of nearly 200 publications including books and
journal articles.
Sabine Junginger is Lecturer in Design at Lancaster
University (ROYAUME-UNI) where she is part of the design
research group ImaginationLancaster. Sabine has co-
developed the MA in Design: Management and Policy
at the Lancaster Institute of Contemporary Arts and
is co-editor of The Handbook of Design Management
(Berg Press, 2011). She is Fellow at the Hertie School of
Governance in Berlin and currently a Visiting Associate
Professor at the Kolding School of Design, Denmark.
Udo Kannengiesser is a design researcher with an
interest in models of designing, design thinking,
and situated design computing. He developed
methodologies and systems to address issues in
mechanical engineering, software engineering, et
business process management. He carried out his
research at the University of Technology, Sydney,
at National ICT Australia, and at the University
of Sydney.
Les problèmes de conception: Volume 28, Nombre 1 Hiver 2012
111
je
D
o
w
n
o
un
d
e
d
F
r
o
m
h
t
t
p
:
/
/
d
je
r
e
c
t
.
m
je
t
.
/
e
d
toi
d
e
s
je
/
je
un
r
t
je
c
e
–
p
d
F
/
/
/
/
2
8
1
1
1
1
1
7
1
6
3
2
6
d
e
s
_
X
_
0
0
1
3
5
p
d
.
/
je
F
b
oui
g
toi
e
s
t
t
o
n
0
7
S
e
p
e
m
b
e
r
2
0
2
3
Christine Taylor Klein has received an MA in
Architectural History from the University of Texas at
Austin and an MArch from Louisiana State University.
Her research is on the common discourse of the two
topics of informal housing and sustainability within
architectural practice and discourse. It is an area of
study that has led her to a faculty position in the
School of Architecture at Lovely Professional
University in India.
Thomas Kong is an Associate Professor and Director
for the Undergraduate Architecture and Interior
Architecture programs at The School of the Art
Institute of Chicago. His research and practice are
centered on architecture as anthropological objects and
the cultural geographies of Asian cities.
Kristina Lauche holds the Chair of Organizational
Development and Design at the Radboud University
Nijmegen and is Professor of Organization Studies
of Innovation at Delft University of Technology. Elle
previously worked at the Swiss Federal Institute of
Technologie (ETH) in Zurich and the University of
Aberdeen, studying organizations from high-risk
industries to manufacturing and consumer goods. Son
main research interests are technology implementation
and appropriation, team processes in complex
environnements, and coordination across functional and
disciplinary boundaries. Her work has been published
in journals such as Design Studies, Journal of Design
Research, Computer Supported Collaborative Work and
Journal of Product Innovation Management.
Gregory Marinic is Director of Interior Architecture
and Assistant Professor in the Gerald D. Hines College
of Architecture at the University of Houston. Il
previously taught at Pratt Institute, City University of
New York, and the Universidad de Monterrey. Gregory
is principal of Arquipelago, an award-winning New
York-based architectural practice engaged in design,
recherche, teaching, and experimentation. Prior to
establishing an independent practice, he worked in
the London and New York offices of Rafael Vinoly
Architects. Gregory is editor of AIA Forward Journal,
Design Principles and Practices, Revue internationale de
the Arts in Society, and IDEC News.
Christina Moon is Assistant Professor in Fashion
Studies at Parsons The New School For Design in New
York City. Her research looks at the social ties and
encounters between design worlds and manufacturing
landscapes in the making of fashion, exploring the
mémoire, migration, and labor of its cultural workers.
Docteur. Moon writes on material culture, social memory,
the ephemeral and every day, and ways of knowing
and representing in ethnographic practice.
Edmundo Morales is a native of the northeastern
Andes of Peru. He holds a PhD from The Graduate
Center of the City University of New York. Il
teaches anthropology at West Chester University
of Pennsylvania. He is the author of Cocaine: Blanc
Gold Rush in Peru, and The Guinea Pig: Food, Healing,
Food, and Rituals in the Andes, both published by
the University of Arizona Press. Actuellement, he is
completing a photo-ethnographic manuscript on
hats and headdresses in the three Andean countries
(Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru).
Todd Nicewonger is a Postdoctoral Fellow in Fashion
Studies at Parsons The New School for Design in New
York City. He received his doctorate from the Applied
Anthropology program at Columbia University. Docteur.
Nicewonger’s research is focused generally on the
anthropology of design, and specifically on how the
institutional socialization of creativity, morality, et
aesthetics shape the production of design forms.
Carolien Postma is product researcher at Philips
Consumer Lifestyle, specializing in user studies in
the early stages of new product development. Elle
previously worked for ID-Studiolab, Delft University
of Technology, where she conducted the study
presented in this paper, and developed a user-centered
design approach, Creating Socionas, as part of her PhD
research in industrial design. Her interests include
design for social experience and design research
methods in new product development practice.
Pieter Jan Stappers is Professor of Design Techniques
at Delft University of Technology. His research and
teaching deal with the early phases of design projects,
With a focus on understanding the context and needs
of end-users, matching these needs with opportunities
in new technology, and communicating needs, ideas,
and product/service concepts. Besides this, his main
interests are expressive visualization techniques, et
the role of design skills in research projects.
Marc Steen works as a senior scientist at TNO, un
independent research organization in the Netherlands.
Marc studied Industrial Design Engineering at Delft
University of Technology and worked at Philips
and KPN. Dans 2008, he defended his PhD thesis
“The Fragility of Human-Centred Design” at Delft
University of Technology, which he wrote within the
practitioners’ PhD program in organization studies
at the University for Humanistics (Utrecht, Le
Netherlands). His interests include human-centered
conception, co-design, open innovation and innovation
management. He also engages in critical reflection on
projects in which he works, drawing from science and
technology studies and philosophy.
112
je
D
o
w
n
o
un
d
e
d
F
r
o
m
h
t
t
p
:
/
/
d
je
r
e
c
t
.
m
je
t
.
/
e
d
toi
d
e
s
je
/
je
un
r
t
je
c
e
–
p
d
F
/
/
/
/
2
8
1
1
1
1
1
7
1
6
3
2
6
d
e
s
_
X
_
0
0
1
3
5
p
d
.
/
je
F
b
oui
g
toi
e
s
t
t
o
n
0
7
S
e
p
e
m
b
e
r
2
0
2
3
Les problèmes de conception: Volume 28, Nombre 1 Hiver 2012
Télécharger le PDF