Design for emergency: Notre Dame professor partners with international team to explore how to help communities prepare for disasters
In the face of climate change, a global pandemic, social inequity and unforeseen conflict, more and more areas of the world are confronting large-scale emergencies and natural disasters — often of a kind or at a magnitude they’ve never seen before.
Clinton Carlson, an associate professor of visual communication design at the University of Notre Dame, is exploring how design can help communities better prepare and respond when disaster strikes.
“I think it’s safe to say that going forward, we will all face different emergencies than we’ve ever faced before in our communities — and we can’t know what those disasters will look like,” Carlson said. “With climate change and other factors really disrupting our expectations of what can happen in an environment, it is really important that we not only improve our response to the emergencies that exist today, but also prepare for new challenges.”
With funding from a Luksic Family Collaboration Grant, through Notre Dame International, Carlson launched an initiative called Design for Emergency, which hosted a series of workshops on campus over the last two weeks.
One of the strengths of design thinking, Carlson said, is that it encourages people to take a holistic approach to a particular issue.
“I love the idea that one of our strengths in design is our lack of knowledge — we recognize that we don’t know everything about a problem we’re approaching, and we’re not too close to it to miss seeing opportunities,” he said. “And that’s a great benefit because we can observe and see patterns and new angles that maybe the people who are in the midst of it don’t always see or have time to think about.”
In partnership with professors from the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile and Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo, Brazil, Carlson began the project in December with a series of roundtable discussions with experts who focus on wayfinding in disaster planning and fostering resilience in tsunami evacuation. The team then hosted four workshops on campus recently — two at the end of January and two on Friday and Saturday.
The first two workshops, one for Notre Dame undergraduates and one open to the public, explored issues related to food security in a crisis — including how to prevent the hoarding of staples like milk, eggs and toilet paper and the subsequent supply chain issues that ensue.
In the first public workshop, Carlson asked participants to consider what type of messaging would be most effective, who should be sending those messages and where they should be encountered. Before leading participants in a series of brainstorming activities, Carlson emphasized the value of a diversity of perspectives.
“As you come to this workshop today, we’re not asking you to be experts in emergencies or in food security,” he said. “We’re asking you to be experts in your own perspective — in how you see the world, your experiences and ideas, and how you make decisions. Because the more perspectives we have as we think about this issue, the better off we will be.”
The second set of workshops centered on emergency response and collaboration among organizations within a community. Attendees worked through scenario-based exercises to examine how organizations on the ground after an emergency can work together more efficiently.
“When you’re dealing with those complex networks, there are thousands of ways that everything can go wrong. If you go in with an expert mentality that ‘we can fix this, and we’ll find that silver bullet that will just work’ — well, those don’t exist. You have to be ready to adapt, to be agile and iterative in what you’re doing. And that’s something design does really well.”
— Clinton Carlson
The researchers plan to conduct a similar series of workshops this summer in Santiago, in collaboration with CIGIDEN, a Chilean research center. They also plan to begin working with and researching international response agencies like the Red Cross, World Vision and Mennonite Disaster Service that are on the ground within days of an emergency.
“We would like to learn more about their experiences, particularly when there are multiple agencies with often multinational, multilingual teams responding to see if there is the potential to develop products that could help them communicate and coordinate,” Carlson said. “Our end goal is to develop a toolkit that can be used by communities and organizations that want to plan for unforeseen emergencies — whether that’s a rural community in Chile that might be facing tsunamis or earthquakes or a community like South Bend that might face entirely different concerns.”
Because design is an interdisciplinary field that is integrated with technology, science and social science research, it’s well suited to the kind collaboration necessary to take on what Carlson terms “wicked problems,” he said.
“We are able to work in those spaces where there’s a complexity to the network of technology, people and organizations,” Carlson said. “We are also not afraid of failure and, in fact, one of our objectives is to find out how things can fail. When you’re dealing with those complex networks, there are thousands of ways that everything can go wrong. If you go in with an expert mentality that ‘we can fix this, and we’ll find that silver bullet that will just work’ — well, those don’t exist.
“You have to be ready to adapt, to be agile and iterative in what you’re doing. And that’s something design does really well.”
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