DESIS Lab research initiatives culminate in the publication of academic papers, reports, and books. Explore the links below to view selected publications by DESIS Lab members and collaborators.
Amplifying Creative Communities in New York City
This book presents a series of articles that analyze and theorize
about the results of the Rockefeller Foundation-funded project Amplifying Creative Communities in New York City. The project explored how New York City, with its cultural and economic vitality, can amplify non-mainstream initiatives, lifestyles, and
ideas to transform them into social innovations leading to sustainable ways of living.
An Introduction to Service Design: Designing the Invisible
Written by Lara de Sousa Penin, this book addresses the new and emerging field of service design and the disciplines that feed on and result from it. Divided into two parts to allow for specific reader requirements, An Introduction to Service Design starts by focusing on the main
service design concepts and critical aspects. Part II offers a methodological overview and practical tools for the service design learner and highlights fundamental capacities the service design student must master. Combined with a number of interviews
and case studies from leading service designers, this is a comprehensive, informative exploration of this exciting new area of design.
Building the Civic Design Field in New York City
Written by Camilla Buchanan, Mariana Amatullo, and Eduardo Staszowski, this paper presents
the methodologies used in and the findings of a 2018 study conducted by a diverse set of practitioners in New York City. The study was aimed at mapping current dynamics and identifying barriers to and opportunities for effective application of design
in the public sector.
(Designing) Beyond the Modern: Limits, Dialectic and Potentialities
Written by Eduardo Staszowski and Virginia Tassinari, this second volume in the trilogy, following Designing in Dark Times: An Arendtian Lexicon, takes up a central provocation: How might we begin to move beyond the Modern when our ways of thinking and making remain entangled in its logic?
Engaging philosophy, decolonial thought, and design theory, the book approaches design not as a neutral tool but as a practice deeply implicated in modernity’s extractive, colonial, and anthropocentric foundations. Without seeking resolution, it calls
for a caesura, a pause or rupture from which a critical praxis might emerge, whether still called design or not. Through essays, fragments, and dialogues—including engagements with Tomás Maldonado, Arturo Escobar, and Aílton Krenak—the book traces
the tensions, limits, and potentialities that arise when thinking and acting beyond the Modern.
Designing in Dark Times: An Arendtian Lexicon
Edited by Eduardo Staszowski and Virginia Tassinari, this book builds on the revival of interest in Hannah Arendt and on the increasing turn in design toward the expanded field of the social. It uses insights and quotations drawn from Arendt’s major writings to assemble a new kind of lexicon for politics, designing
and acting today. In 2022, the book received a Compasso D’Oro from the Associazione per il Disegno Industriale (ADI), an honor awarded only every two years. The book won in the section for theoretical, historical, critical research and editorial projects
in design. Read an interview with the editors here.
Designing Services for Housing
The publication of the findings contained in this guide marks a milestone
in DESIS Lab's partnership with the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) and Public Policy Lab, a Brooklyn-based nonprofit. The guide describes the service environment for New Yorkers seeking HPD services and/or living
in neighborhoods with significant HPD agency presence. It outlines current opportunities and possibilities for improving services and provides technical and strategic information about implementing recommendations either through agencies or in collaboration
with other stakeholders. This initiative was made possible by the generous support of the Rockefeller Foundation.
DESIS Thematic Cluster: Public and Collaborative
Edited by Ezio Manzini and Eduardo Staszowski, this book describes
the activities of European, Canadian, and U.S. DESIS labs participating in the Public and Collaborative Thematic Cluster. The book includes 11 articles that critically reflect on the labs' projects and activities from 2012 to 2013.
Government Innovation Labs
With the expert advice of Christian Bason and Andrea Schneider, Daniela Selloni and Eduardo Staszowski created a map to illustrate and monitor the emergence of Government Innovation Labs around the world. These labs propose and experiment with ideas for innovative public services and policies and also try to reform existing government operations. Amy Findeiss provided
the illustrations and graphic design for the map.
Public Goods
Edited by Eduardo Staszowski and Scott Brown, this special issue of
the Journal of Design Strategies considers the import of design practices concerned with the production and distribution of public goods. The contributions to this issue emerged from ongoing conversations initiated at the Stephan Weiss Lectures
for the 2013–2014 academic year; two public events were held at which a group of leading practitioners and scholars were encouraged to reflect on this issue and the critical questions arising from it. Bringing together practitioners, social scientists,
and design theorists, this issue explores the challenges design must confront in effecting social change in the public realm. In addressing such challenges, the contributing essays explored the questions such practices pose to the relationship between
the infrastructure provided by institutions and regulative norms and emerging forms of commons and community.
Public Libraries as Engines of Democracy: A research and pedagogical case study on design for re-entry
Written by Lara de Sousa Penin, Eduardo Staszowski, John Bruce, Barbara Adams and Mariana Amatulllo, this paper presents insights from a collaboration with the Brooklyn Public Library that focused on the library’s current re-entry services directed to formerly incarcerated patrons and their families. Drawing from participatory design
and visual ethnographic approaches to inquiry, this study contributes to our understanding of the relational dimensions of design and its role as a reflexive and caring practice.
Teaching the Next Generation of Transdisciplinary Thinkers and Practitioners of Design-Based Public and Social Innovation
In this article, Lara de Sousa Penin, Eduardo Staszowski, and Scott Brown discuss the pedagogical opportunities, limits, and difficulties around the training of future transdisciplinary thinkers and practitioners seeking to address a range
of complex social and political issues and willing to operate within the interstitial spaces between government, civil society, and the market, where new social innovations can arise. To do so, they focus on a fall 2013 studio course taught in Parsons'
Transdisciplinary Design MFA Program titled The NYC Office of Public Imagination. The challenge was for students to design a hypothetical governmental agency, find a place for it inside the existing structure and parameters of city government, and
imagine what that agency would do using design as a catalyst for social innovation.
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Service Design: Plural Perspectives and a Critical Contemporary Agenda
Edited by Lara Penin, Alison Prendiville, and Daniela Sangiorgi, this volume brings together a diverse array of thinkers and practitioners to offer a timely and critical reflection on the evolving field of service design. As the discipline gains prominence across industry and academia, the book examines
its core principles while opening it up to plural perspectives that foreground complexity, surface tensions, and expand its scope. Through contributions from voices around the world, it explores how service design engages with pressing global issues
such as climate, social justice, and racial equity, while also addressing its role within broader systems of change. Organized into five thematic sections, the handbook moves across cosmologies, critical agendas, contextual practices, and future-oriented
approaches, offering both conceptual frameworks and situated examples that point toward new directions for the field.
The Disobedience of Design
Edited by Lara de Sousa Penin, this book presents for the first
time in English, an extensive selection of Gui Bonsiepe’s writings. A mainstay in European and Latin and South American design culture, Bonsiepe's texts remains little known in English-language design literature. The book chronologically charts a
cultural bridge between generations, spanning from design discourse of the Ulm School to the issues of early twenty-first century. Even more crucially, it provides valuable insights on the contested relationships between design praxis, design theory,
and design research
The Opposing Designs of Urban Activism
A four-part series by Cameron Tonkinwise sharing lessons from Amplifying Creative Communities, a two-year project of the DESIS Lab exploring sustainable social innovations by communities around New York City.
The Politics and Theatre of Service Design
In this article, Lara de Sousa Penin and Cameron Tonkinwise discuss tensions
within service design, particularly in jobs in which an inherent asymmetry between the provider and the recipient constrains possibilities for co-creation. This makes service design unavoidably political. The paper also reviews theater methods that
can be used by designers to gain an understanding of the political complexities at work in service provision.
Towards a Sustainable Present: Urgency and Agency in Transition Design
A position paper presented
by Eduardo Staszowski, Lara de Sousa Penin, and Andrew Moon to the Transition Design Symposium at the School of Design, Carnegie Mellon University.
Trickery in Design: Cooptation, Subversion and Politics
In this book chapter, Nidhi Srinivas and Eduardo Staszowski discuss the question
of whose interests designers serve and the way design sometimes interacts with organizational and political processes to thwart intentions.