”Sketch and Talk”, Drawing lines between incarcerated humans, the interior, and “stuff”. Design methodologies for (well)-being in prisons, youth homes and psychiatric hospitals

dc.contributor.authorJames, Franz
dc.date.accessioned2023-08-31T13:27:24Z
dc.date.available2023-08-31T13:27:24Z
dc.date.issued2023-08-31
dc.description.abstractWith increasing global and local incarceration, the demand for prison beds is rapidly growing. The Swedish government’s plans for implementing youth prisons and amending laws regarding young people’s sentences risk increasing the already high numbers of mental health problems. Although security is an inherent element of institutions for care and incarceration (ICI), the present focus on reinforcing security is similarly jeopardizing the health of inmates, patients, and youths in prisons, forensic psychiatric hospitals, and youth homes. Moreover, the rapid production of beds will likely lead to issues with staff security and work environment. The field of research for design in correctional institutions and behavioral health is limited. Although there is an increased interest in evidence-based design, EBD cannot be said to extend to all design aspects for vulnerable people in ICIs. However, this dissertation critically discusses the dichotomies, meanings, and connecting lines between incarcerated humans, the interior, and stuff, and it looks primarily at the design of institutions in Scandinavia. Moreover, ICIs are understood in this dissertation as an existential and ethical dichotomy with well-being on the one hand and the losses that incarceration brings on the other. The tension between punishment and (re)habilitation manifests through materiality, design, and high-security measures. However, the question for design is not whether it is possible to hinder the pain and losses that come with incarceration but how design can mitigate these losses, alleviate pain, foster well-being, and assist staff through a safe and supportive work environment. Part of this doctoral project has been conducted within a multidisciplinary research project aimed at creating knowledge about youths’ experience of the physical environment in Sweden’s youth homes (SiS). Two of this dissertation’s five papers were written as part of this research project (IV, V). The other three papers discuss the early method development of Sketch and Talk (II), the narrative of patients’ experience of the physical environment in forensic care (I), and the design of prison cells through the narratives of three women (III). The theoretical underpinning of this dissertation is inspired by phenomenology and ethnography. It therefore advocates for a design research methodology that brings the researcher closer to the phenomenon and into the node of peoples’ experiences. Hence, one of this dissertation’s contributions is the Sketch and Talk method, which uses sketching and talking when meeting a participant in their cell or room as a way of creating a space for mutual observation and understanding of the interior. Moreover, as ethical awareness is paramount in research with vulnerable groups, the method has been valuable through its transparency and open approach. Design for ICIs can be seen as a “wicked problem” and is as much an ethical and ideological matter as a design-related problem. This dissertation identifies a “wickedness” in how design processes primarily take their point of departure in previous products and seek to improve them. Therefore, when penal ideology is saturating the previous product (ICI) the ideology has pertained to the new ICI as carceral design heritage. Identifying carceral design is in itself a first step in designing for well-being. This presents a wide-open opportunity to reform and rethink – an opportunity we must take, particularly in light of planned investments and expansion. This dissertation suggests that future research can contribute with more knowledge on how an interior can promote well-being through design for autonomy, dwelling, and movement and as a result can open up new horizons of change and hope.en
dc.gup.defencedate2023-09-22
dc.gup.defenceplaceSeptember 22, 14.00, HDK-Valand, Chalmersgatan 4 (Glashuset)en
dc.gup.departmentHDK-Valand - Academy of Art and Design ; HDK-Valand - Högskolan för konst och designen
dc.gup.mailfranz.james@hdk.gu.seen
dc.gup.originGöteborgs universitet. Konstnärliga fakultetenswe
dc.gup.originUniversity of Gothenburg. Faculty of Fine, Applied and Performing Artseng
dc.identifier.isbn978-91-8069-149-9 (Printed) 978-91-8069-150-5 (Digital)
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2077/76386
dc.language.isoengen
dc.relation.haspart1. ”Allt annat än hemma, det är helvetet!” Berättelser om den fysiska miljön på Rågården. James, F. 2017. C. Caldenby & S. Lundin (Eds.), Rättspsykiatri med mänskligt ansikte”: ARQ – Stiftelsen för arkitekturforskning. (English title: “Everything but home, it’s hell!” Narratives about the physical environment at Rågården.)en
dc.relation.haspart2. “‘Sketch and Talk’: An ethnographic design method opening closed institutions.” James, F., 2017. Cumulus Working Papers 33/16: Cumulus Hong Kong 2016: Open Design for E-very-thing. https://www.hkdi.edu.hk/images/about/publication/academic/Open%20Design%20for%20Everything.pdfen
dc.relation.haspart3. “‘It’s important to not lose myself’ Beds, Carceral Design and Women’s Everyday Life within Prison Cells” James, F. (2018). E. Fransson, F. Giofrè, & B. Johnsen (Eds.), Prison Architecture and Humans. Cappelen Damm Akademisk. https://press.nordicopenaccess.no/index.php/noasp/catalog/book/31en
dc.relation.haspart4. “Designing for care: employing ethnographic design methods at special care homes for young offenders – a pilot study” James, F., & Olausson, S., 2018. Design for Health, 2:1. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/24735132.2018.1456783en
dc.relation.haspart5. “‘Fit and Re- Orientation’ Carceral Heritage in Contemporary Design of Special Residential Homes for Youth and Its Impact on Wellbeing”. James, F., & Olausson, S., 2021. Brill.en
dc.relation.ispartofseriesNo. 95 in the series Art Monitor doctoral dissertationsen
dc.subjectDesign methodsen
dc.subjectDesign methodologyen
dc.subjectField drawingen
dc.subjectEthnographic drawingen
dc.subjectCarceral designen
dc.subjectPrison designen
dc.subjectYouth homesen
dc.subjectForensic psychiatric hospitalsen
dc.subjectSketchingen
dc.subject.svepDoctoral thesiseng
dc.title”Sketch and Talk”, Drawing lines between incarcerated humans, the interior, and “stuff”. Design methodologies for (well)-being in prisons, youth homes and psychiatric hospitalsen
dc.typeText
dc.type.degreeDoctor of Philosophyen

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