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  1. 2011年9月10日 · "Lewis pursues a classic anthropological strategy – to learn something about ourselves by paying close and sympathetic attention to how others see us. In his article for Radical Anthropology, Lewis considers what the Yaka hunter-gatherers of Congo-Brazzaville make of Western ‘conservation’ efforts.

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    "Value-Sensitive Design is primarily concerned with values that center on human well being, human dignity, justice, welfare, and human rights. Value-Sensitive Design connects the people who design systems and interfaces with the people who think about and understand the values of the stakeholders who are affected by the systems. Ultimately, Value-S...

    Desirable values: - privacy ,- ownership and property,- freedom from bias,- universal usability,- autonomy,- informed consent,- trust excerpted from this pdf : http://www.urbansim.org/papers/vsd-and-information-systems.pdf

    Design for Values as a method

    L. Jean Camp : "How is it that values such as privacy and autonomy become embedded in technical designs? How do cultural concepts of privacy, property, and propriety become assumptions about trust embedded in the coded infrastructure? Design for values theory, method, bibliography, and practitioners are described at http://www.designforvalues.org. Design for values is a methodological approach based on a soft technological determinism, based on itterative evaluation of technology using the to...

    Design for sustainability is inherently participatory

    Daniel Christian Wahland Seaton Baxter: "Sustainability is rapidly becoming an issue of critical importance for designers and society as a whole. A complexity of dynamically interrelated ecological, social, cultural economic and psychological (awareness) problems interact and converge in the current crisis of our unsustainable civilization. However, in a constantly changing environment, sustainability is not some ultimate endpoint but is better conceived as a continuous process of learning an...

    The importance of Meta-design as awareness of intentionality

    Daniel Christian Wahland Seaton Baxter: "Design can most broadly be defined as the expression of intentionality through interactions and relationships. At the downstream end of this process our cultural artefacts, institutions and patterns of production and consumption express intentionality materially. Upstream, in the immaterial dimension, the ‘metadesign’ of our conscious awareness, value systems, worldviews, and aspirations defines the intentionality behind materialized design. Here the t...

    Michael Zimmer writes about Values in Design, at http://michaelzimmer.org/category/values-in-design/
  2. As Marjorie Kelly explains: “The generative economy is not a legal exercise but the embodiment of an emerging value system. Companies in the generative economy are built around values: the John Lewis Partnership’s core value is fairness, while Organic Valley

  3. ... The FairShares Model suggests integrating (social) entrepreneurs, producers, consumers and (social and community) investors. With these changes, the common bond is understood and experienced differently.

  4. How Worlds Collapse. What History, Systems, and Complexity Can Teach Us About Our Modern World and Fragile Future. Edited By Miguel Centeno, Peter Callahan, Paul Larcey, Thayer Patterson. Routledge, 2013.

  5. For the governance of the Global Commons of humanity, we advocate replacing the scarcity-engineering of neoliberal markets by the abundance engineering of the Commons: see the Abundance - Typology and the Wealth Typology. Policy concepts and proposals are maintained here .

  6. To transition to this new system, Lewis recognizes the need for strategic interventions, from minimizing investments on carbon intensive services and products to the adoption of basic minimum income guarantees, debt-free money, and “glocalization” through a