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(via This Halloween: What Does It Mean To Call Something 'Spooky'? : Code Switch : NPR)

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The Tripiṭaka Koreana (lit. Goryeo Tripiṭaka) or Palman Daejanggyeong ("Eighty-Thousand Tripiṭaka") is a Korean collection of the Tripiṭaka (Buddhist scriptures, and the Sanskrit word for "three baskets"), carved onto 81,258 wooden printing blocks in the 13th century.[1]
Tripitaka Koreana - Wikipedia
Bì Shēng (972–1051 AD) was a Chinese artisan, engineer, and inventor of the world's first movable type technology, with printing being one of the Four Great Inventions of Ancient China.
That means as a designer — again, in the context of Seven Generations thinking — that you think about, “What in my design might cause trauma to begin with? Who could this hurt today? Who could this hurt in the future?” But at the same time you can say, “Who could this help? Who could this assist? Could my design assist the most vulnerable in their ability to cope with the conditions that are causing their vulnerability?” That’s not abstract. There are very specific design decisions that you can make that provide affordances for helping or harming, and we make those decisions as designers every single day. What we’re trying to increase is the level of consciousness around the impact of those decisions and the depth of knowledge that helps you understand why this could be helpful or harmful and for whom.
Respecting our Relations: Dori Tunstall on Decolonizing Design

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131. Danah Abdulla
Danah Abdulla is a designer, educator, and researcher. She's a Senior Lecturer in Communication Design at Brunel University London; founder of Kalimat, non-profit magazine about Arab thought and culture; and a founding member of the Decolonising Design platform. In this episode, Danah and Jarrett talk about localizing design education, studying social design, and what it means to decolonize design.
Design's Role in Activism Can Go Deeper Than Posters and T-Shirts
Dori Tunstall feature on Eye on Design
Decolonizing Design Lecture Series ft. Dori Tunstall
Elizabeth Dori Tunstall, design anthropologist, researcher, academic leader, writer, educator, and dean of the Ontario College of Art and Design spoke to students, faculty, and members of the public as part of our 2017 Architecture Lecture Series.