Social innovation is one of the most dynamic, expansive and
exciting fields of endeavor today. It is the application of new
strategies and models to solving the challenges facing the world, and to
strengthening society. In "Blessed Unrest," Paul Hawkins describes its
remarkable force in the world as “the largest movement on earth, a
movement that has no name, leader or location, and that has gone largely
ignored by politicians and the media. Like nature itself, it is
organizing from the bottom up, in every city, town and culture, and is
emerging to be an extraordinary and creative expression of people’s
needs worldwide.”
Design
has the potential to be the most powerful integrating force in helping
us address the challenges we face. Designers are, by nature, committed
to giving back and to engaging in work with purpose, yet there has been
no learning path for them to play a leading role social innovation. How
can we learn to turn our good intentions into positive impact?
What
exactly IS Design for Social Innovation? What are the forms, the tools
and the contexts in which it takes place? What are the roles
for designers in this exciting new field? And most important, how can
designers learn and become involved?
In
this discussion, Cheryl Heller will define Design for Social
Innovation, social innovation, give examples of Design for Social
Innovation, and talk about how to make it a part of every designers’
career.
Cheryl Heller is
Chair of the new Masters Program at the School of Visual Arts in New
York in Design for Social Innovation, founder of Heller Communication
Design, and Board Chair of PopTech, a thought leadership conference and
social innovation accelerator. She is a pioneering communication
designer and business strategist, who has ledtransformational
initiatives for entrepreneurs, corporations and Non-Profits, including
Mars, L’Oreal, Seventh Generation, Reebok, Kodak Professional,
Bayer Corporation, BlackRock, Marriott Corporation, Cemex, Seagrams,
Ford Motor Company, Discovery Networks International, MeadWestvaco,
Sappi, WWF, Girl Scouts of America, IDE (International Development
Enterprises) and the Cloud Institute for Sustainability Education.