In 2012, a new International Symbol of Access (ISA) has been introduced by designers Sara Hendren and Brian Glenny as a counter-image to the ubiquitous wheelchair symbol of Karl Montan. By presenting a new symbol, the designers wanted to draw attention to some of the visual attributes of the former symbol they found problematic, such as its passive and robot-like depiction of a human being, while simultaneously addressing, in a broader sense, the place and the degree of acceptance of the disabled within society. Comparing the two sides of this ‘design activism’, that is creating a more clear and intelligible sign connoting disability and raising a social discussion concerning the disabled, will be the focus of the essay, assessing how the e...
Comunicação apresentada na conferência Dare to Desire: 6th International Design & Emotion Conferenc...
When scholars contemplate the legal tools available to policymakers for encouraging innovation, they...
This paper discusses a way of thinking about disability which has emerged out of the UK Disabled Peo...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA) is one of the most recognized in the world and for last 45 ...
One of the most recognizable symbols is the International Symbol of Access (ISA) (Ben-Moshe, L & Pow...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA), used in a variety of specific locations to represent purpo...
peer reviewedThe International Symbol of Access (ISA), when integrated into signage, is meant to des...
<p>The International Symbol of Access (ISA) produces, capacitates, and debilitates disability in par...
When integrated into signage, the international symbol of accessibility designates accessible spaces...
peer reviewedThe International Symbol of Access (ISA), used in a variety of specific locations to re...
This paper uses a cultural studies lens to suggest that the ISA confers a semiotic imposition of “ot...
The article applies Alfred Schutz’s phenomenologically grounded sociological perspective to explore ...
Over the past fifty years, design and branding have become omnipotent in the market and have made th...
It is an unmistakable fact that objects hold an important role in the construction of identity, acti...
This paper will address recent debates surrounding the nature and cause of the complex process of di...
Comunicação apresentada na conferência Dare to Desire: 6th International Design & Emotion Conferenc...
When scholars contemplate the legal tools available to policymakers for encouraging innovation, they...
This paper discusses a way of thinking about disability which has emerged out of the UK Disabled Peo...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA) is one of the most recognized in the world and for last 45 ...
One of the most recognizable symbols is the International Symbol of Access (ISA) (Ben-Moshe, L & Pow...
The International Symbol of Access (ISA), used in a variety of specific locations to represent purpo...
peer reviewedThe International Symbol of Access (ISA), when integrated into signage, is meant to des...
<p>The International Symbol of Access (ISA) produces, capacitates, and debilitates disability in par...
When integrated into signage, the international symbol of accessibility designates accessible spaces...
peer reviewedThe International Symbol of Access (ISA), used in a variety of specific locations to re...
This paper uses a cultural studies lens to suggest that the ISA confers a semiotic imposition of “ot...
The article applies Alfred Schutz’s phenomenologically grounded sociological perspective to explore ...
Over the past fifty years, design and branding have become omnipotent in the market and have made th...
It is an unmistakable fact that objects hold an important role in the construction of identity, acti...
This paper will address recent debates surrounding the nature and cause of the complex process of di...
Comunicação apresentada na conferência Dare to Desire: 6th International Design & Emotion Conferenc...
When scholars contemplate the legal tools available to policymakers for encouraging innovation, they...
This paper discusses a way of thinking about disability which has emerged out of the UK Disabled Peo...