Drowning prevention by design:: the semiotics of prototyping in low-resource environments – case study Zanzibar
Drowning prevention by design:: the semiotics of prototyping in low-resource environments – case study Zanzibar
This paper presents an overview of an exploratory case study collaboration between Arts University Bournemouth (AUB) and the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) in support of an RNLI delivery programme for international community management of drowning prevention in low-resource environments. The study focuses on the development of low-volume public rescue throw-lines that can be community made and maintained, the assembly and use of which are supported by a set of RNLI-developed instruction manuals intended for universal dissemination. The study examines the clarity of the instructions in the context of the makers’ interpretation of the manuals within the local constraints of Zanzibar. Preliminary findings indicate that these universally intended instruction manuals, in their current format, are open to interpretation, producing unsafe drowning prevention rescue lines that do not meet safety-critical standards. A re-design of the manuals through creative collaboration in a local context are the outcomes of this research. Discussion is also given as to whether a universal instruction manual should be the desirable outcome.
Conrad, Franziska
ee74a7c3-1c1c-43b0-8a2f-f2284e704dbd
Devall, Lucy
931878de-e676-499c-a082-eb2388caed42
25 August 2020
Conrad, Franziska
ee74a7c3-1c1c-43b0-8a2f-f2284e704dbd
Devall, Lucy
931878de-e676-499c-a082-eb2388caed42
Conrad, Franziska and Devall, Lucy
(2020)
Drowning prevention by design:: the semiotics of prototyping in low-resource environments – case study Zanzibar.
The Sixth International Conference on Design Creativity, , Oulu, Finland.
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Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
This paper presents an overview of an exploratory case study collaboration between Arts University Bournemouth (AUB) and the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) in support of an RNLI delivery programme for international community management of drowning prevention in low-resource environments. The study focuses on the development of low-volume public rescue throw-lines that can be community made and maintained, the assembly and use of which are supported by a set of RNLI-developed instruction manuals intended for universal dissemination. The study examines the clarity of the instructions in the context of the makers’ interpretation of the manuals within the local constraints of Zanzibar. Preliminary findings indicate that these universally intended instruction manuals, in their current format, are open to interpretation, producing unsafe drowning prevention rescue lines that do not meet safety-critical standards. A re-design of the manuals through creative collaboration in a local context are the outcomes of this research. Discussion is also given as to whether a universal instruction manual should be the desirable outcome.
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Published date: 25 August 2020
Venue - Dates:
The Sixth International Conference on Design Creativity, , Oulu, Finland, 2020-08-26
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Local EPrints ID: 472073
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472073
PURE UUID: a4604878-0877-4314-85bc-7c0c0e10982d
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Date deposited: 24 Nov 2022 18:47
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:13
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Contributors
Author:
Franziska Conrad
Author:
Lucy Devall
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