Can you really help me?

Supporting empathic dialogue to understand care service for assisting women against violence

Master Thesis (2020)
Author(s)

M.E. Lopez Reyes (TU Delft - Industrial Design Engineering)

Contributor(s)

Marieke Sonneveld – Mentor (TU Delft - Human Factors)

F Sleeswijk Visser – Mentor (TU Delft - Codesigning Social Change)

Mariana Espeleta Olivera – Mentor

Faculty
Industrial Design Engineering
Copyright
© 2020 M.E. Lopez Reyes
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 M.E. Lopez Reyes
Graduation Date
28-08-2020
Awarding Institution
Delft University of Technology
Programme
['Strategic Product Design']
Faculty
Industrial Design Engineering
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Even though there has been an enormous effort to tackle the problem of gender-based violence against women in Mexico, within legal terms, the landscape still seems uncertain, and the need for innovative approaches that bring new meaningful ways to look at the problem becomes highly relevant.

In those lines, the University Center for Dignity and Justice Francisco Suárez, SJ (CUDJ for its initials in Spanish), is working in making a diagnosis of the problem to propose strategies that ensure a life free of violence for women by triggering the discussions with the authorities in charge.

This report presents the research, analysis, design and development process of a proposal that seeks to provide tools to foster dialogues for an empathetic perspective, which encourages the emergence of shared knowledge and meanings, unveiling new perspectives to drive innovation and promote change.

Through a service design study, a set of dialogic visual tools translated women’s experiences into visualizations that enable the viewer to understand, empathize, and take an active responsibility towards women’s needs.

At the end of each chapter, a summary of the key insights that drove the design process is presented. The project aims to contribute to the discussion of the role of visualization in the emerging design landscape and how it is possible to contribute to the understanding, in human-scale, of complex contexts such as violence against women.

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