{"id":2916,"date":"2025-08-07T09:00:28","date_gmt":"2025-08-07T09:00:28","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.angesfinanciers.org\/?p=2916"},"modified":"2025-08-08T15:11:56","modified_gmt":"2025-08-08T15:11:56","slug":"we-must-confront-designs-colonial-inheritance","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.angesfinanciers.org\/index.php\/2025\/08\/07\/we-must-confront-designs-colonial-inheritance\/","title":{"rendered":"“We must confront design’s colonial inheritance”"},"content":{"rendered":"
\"Cesca<\/div>\n

For design to become truly sustainable<\/a> in the face of rapid climate change<\/a> we must first acknowledge its ties to colonialism, writes C\u00e9line Semaan<\/a>.<\/span><\/p>\n


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We are no longer designing to prevent disaster.<\/strong> We have already crossed<\/a> the critical threshold with global warming surpassing 1.5 degrees Celsius, so the era of prevention is behind us.<\/p>\n

What lies ahead is adaptation: designing for profound, ongoing and irreversible change. As climate disasters<\/a> become more frequent and undeniable, fires engulf coastlines, floods swallow cities and infrastructure buckles under climate extremes, the world scrambles to respond to emergencies it was never built to withstand.<\/p>\n

To have any hope of meeting the enormous challenge before us, we must ask: who was the world built for?<\/p>\n

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Design under empire was not just about making objects, it was about asserting control<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n

For the last 500 years, the field of design has served colonial and capitalist systems that prized aesthetics over justice, optimisation over care and extraction over reciprocity. It assumed infinite access to land, labour and raw materials \u2013 access made possible through conquest, slavery and resource theft.<\/p>\n

Industrial design was not an innocent byproduct, nor a driver of progress. It was a handmaiden of empire, used to organise life, enforce hierarchies and manufacture consent.<\/p>\n

One of the most iconic examples is the cane chair \u2013 celebrated for its light, elegant design, yet built on rattan extracted through colonial exploitation in Southeast Asia and shaped by the labour of colonised workers whose histories remain largely erased from design narratives.<\/p>\n