Design from the Margins (DFM)

Co-designing with lived experience and creativity, outside the comfort zone

This DESIS Cluster focuses on social design educational interventions, bringing together
students and people from the margins, in different contexts, distant from their normal sphere
of interactions.

Founded in 2023 by Cecilia Casas Romero (ESDA DESIS Lab, Spain) and Dr Francesco Mazzarella (UAL DESIS Lab, UK), Design from the Margins is a DESIS Cluster that
explores how social design education can act as a catalyst for positive change by bringing
together students and marginalised communities (including prisoners, refugees, people
with disabilities, those experiencing homelessness, etc.) to co-create social
transformation. The Cluster takes an asset-based approach, shifting the focus from deficit
to potential. It challenges conventional narratives of marginality by recognising the creative,
collaborative, and innovative capacities that arise from the margins, and reframes design
education as a tool for social justice, inclusion, and resilience.

The Cluster aims to:

  • Foster social design educational interventions in challenging contexts, connecting
    students with people and places often distant from their normal sphere of interaction.
    Such projects involve students from diverse design sub-disciplines (fashion, product,
    graphic, interior, etc.) and at various levels (BA, MA, PhD), working on real projects
    briefs with partners and community members.
  • Encourage collaboration and knowledge exchange among DESIS Labs working at
    the intersections of education, community engagement, and social innovation.
  • Reflect critically on the implications of social design teaching, developing
    mindsets and pedagogies that complement mainstream design disciplines and
    advance the “third mission” of universities.

Since its inception, the Cluster has convened regular online meetings (including
“Reframing Vulnerability,” “Being Caught in the Crossfire,” and “Strategies to Avoid
Parachuting”) and annual in-person gatherings at the ESDA Social Design Days in
Zaragoza. These forums provide safe spaces for discussion, reflection, and collaboration.

Cluster activities include:

  • Sharing of participatory design practices, such as workshops, observations,
    interviews, cultural probes, prototyping, user testing, etc.
  • Research-informed teaching, where educational projects generate both
    pedagogical and research outputs.
  • Case study collection of DESIS Lab projects meeting key criteria: being led by a
    DESIS Lab, involving students, engaging people from the margins, and co-creating
    social change.
  • Development of a curated exhibition and publication showcasing diverse project outputs (films, photos, physical artefacts, games, and more) designed for multiple audiences including educators, communities, partners, and funders.

The following themes emerge from the case studies and activities of this Cluster:

  • Empowerment and wellbeing through creative participation.
  • Cultural sustainability and place-making as design-led community outcomes.
  • Socio-economic inclusion and pathways to entrepreneurship.
  • Design ethics, addressing issues of vulnerability, representation, and collaboration
    without “parachuting” into communities.
  • The educational value of encountering difference, which deepens empathy,
    reflexivity, and professional growth among design students.

The Cluster highlights the transformative power of design education to foster mutual learning
and social innovation from the margins. Impacts range from enhanced wellbeing,
empowerment, safety, community resilience, socio-economic integration, entrepreneurship,
sustainability, place-making, and contribution to peace.

Key challenges include navigating power dynamics, sustaining long-term engagement, and
ensuring that co-created outcomes have lasting relevance for communities. Yet, these
challenges also generate valuable learnings about ethical collaboration, co-ownership of
design processes, and the role of design schools in shaping a just transition toward more
equitable, inclusive, and sustainable futures.