Abstract
The article explores the brief, but ardent history of the Scandinavian Design Students Organization (SDO) in the late 1960s. Dissatisfied with contemporary design practice and education, a group of students aimed to reposition design, both in its methods and purpose, bringing it more in line with what they perceived to be the urgent challenges of society. The article focuses on the three summer seminars organized by the SDO as well as the two published issues of the member’s magazine &, and places them in a broader history of social design, co-design and participatory design. The study also reveals the mutual influence between Nordic design students and Victor J. Papanek, and places this cooperation in a broader geographic context.
The final version of this research has been published in Design and Culture. © 2016 Taylor & Francis