Issue 33: Design
Sol Sender || Strategist, VSA Partners
Designers of all ages and disciplines have been inspired by the President-elect’s campaign and victory and are motivated to bring the power of design to bear on the challenges facing our country. Information graphics and citizen interfaces (voting machines, tax forms, government websites) are areas of potential, and needed, impact. Already, the relationship between the government and the (technologically literate) citizenship is undergoing a profound shift; this will be a powerful legacy of the incoming administration and should contribute to sustaining our position as the global leader in information technology and user interface innovation.
The designs of products and systems, however, present even more urgent challenges. How, for example, will financial derivative structures or the healthcare system be redesigned? How will the world’s energy and natural resources problems be solved? How can we design regulations that harness the power of the free market while protecting the well-being of the broadest possible global constituency? What about our school systems?
The principles of design can transcend graphic communications, user interface, industrial design and architecture. Good design is also the design of the good: clear, efficient, accessible; usable, sustainable, elegant; inventive; beautiful. Across all disciplines, design has the power to make the world more intelligible–easier to navigate, more inviting and engaging, more relevant and more meaningful.
Might we be inaugurating an era of better design? Many of us believe it possible. Many of us believe that design principles are at the core of hope and real change: a better designed world for every American; a better designed America for the world.
Sol Sender is the former president and creative director of Sender LLC - designers of the Obama’08 logo.
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44 Issues in 44 Days
Explore and respond to the issues that matter to you.
# 35: Diplomacy
# 36: Fashion
# 37: Interior Design
# 28: Agriculture
# 5: Public Health
# 2: Transportation
Inaugural Insight
- The inauguration for the first U.S. president, George Washington, was held on April 30, 1789 in New York City.
