<p>How might we develop products made<i> with</i> and <i>by</i> disabled users rather than <i>for</i> them? Could we change living and working spaces to make them accessible rather than designing products that fix disabilities? How can we grow our capabilities to make designs more bespoke to each individual? <i>After Universal Design </i>brings together scholars practitioners and disabled users and makers to consider these questions and to argue for the necessity of a new user-centered design. <p/>As many YouTube videos demonstrate disabled designers are not only fulfilling the grand promises of DIY design but are also questioning what constitutes meaningful design itself. By forcing a rethink of the top-down professionalized practice of Universal Design which has dominated thinking and practice around design for disability for decades this book models what inclusive design and social justice can look like as activism academic research and everyday life practices today. <p/>With chapters case studies and interviews exploring questions of design and personal agency hardware and spaces the experiences of prosthetics' users conventional hearing aid devices designed to suit personal style and ways of facilitating pain self-reporting these essays expand our understanding of what counts as design by offering alternative narratives about creativity and making. Using critical perspectives on disability race and gender this book allow us to understand how design often works in the real world and challenges us to rethink ideas of inclusion in design.</p>
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