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Systems thinking in design: service design and self-services

Partners' Institution
Södertörn University
Reference
Darzentas, J., & Darzentas, J. S. (2014). Systems thinking in design: Service design and self-services. FormAkademisk-forskningstidsskrift for design og designdidaktikk, 7(4).
Thematic Area
Media technology (computer science and mathematics), Systems thinking-Theoretical framework and assessment
DOI
Summary
The purpose of this paper is twofold. Firstly, it seeks to use a practical real-world example to demonstrate the power of a systems thinking perspective in design, and more specifically in the design of services. It makes use of the paradigm of e-accessibility, in the application domain of publicly available self-services. Secondly, the benefits of this perspective will be discussed, through some theoretical tenets of systems thinking, such as the use of emerging properties, the law of requisite variety and notions of second order cybernetics, in terms of the richness that they offer to the conceptualisation and praxis of design in general, and service design in particular. Finally, we speculate on the implications of systems thinking to question the nature of the interdisciplinarity and even transdisciplinarity of design.
Relevance for Complex Systems Knowledge
The paper discusses how a systems thinking perspective can be integrated in service design
Point of Strength
Service design is an integral part of media technology and related fields. The paper provides insights on how a systems thinking perspective could be integrated in service design education
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License