From AIGA Insight ~ Topics: AIGA, environment, social responsibility
How Can AIGA Design a Responsible Future?
Saving civilization is not a spectator sport. Each of us has a leading role to play.”
—Lester R. Brown, author, Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization
AIGA members want to be supported by their professional association in at least three areas: offering inspiration, demonstrating the value of design to business and creating opportunities for design to make a difference in culture and society. AIGA activities are forged to these interests, as is AIGA’s mission, which asserts the belief that “by increasing the influence of design, we can improve the human experience.”
On Earth Day, it is worth reviewing how AIGA and its members have approached design’s role and responsibility in environmental, climate and energy terms. AIGA is committed to leading the profession and to the profession’s leading in the design of the future. This requires that we understand the importance of sustainable practices.
AIGA supports designers in their search for resources, ideas and examples, as well as offering principles to guide a designer’s actions.
Sustainability, as an outcome rather than a politically correct label, must deal with both human and natural dimensions. If our civilization is to be sustained, people must be helped out of poverty, disease and hunger. If the environment is to be sustained, we must deal with the challenges of limited resources and climate change. These latter two concerns encompass energy sources and consumption.
Principles
As principles defining the role of designers, AIGA has adopted and endorsed the UN Declaration of Human Rights, the Designers Accord and the Kyoto Design Declaration. To guide designers more specifically, AIGA includes environmental and social responsibility in its Standards of Professional Practice and downloadable brochure on print design and environmental responsibility.
Actions
As a model for members and the broader community, AIGA seeks to minimize its carbon footprint and adverse impacts at its headquarters in New York and through its national activities. Assessments of environmental engineering and responsible printing have resulted in: a reduction in our use of hazardous materials, increased waste recycling, the conservation of water and energy, improvements to mechanical systems, the installation of a green roof, purchasing green electricity, planning greener conferences, a reduction in paper consumption and a switch to recycled toner cartridges.
We have purchased carbon offsets for all AIGA activities at the national and chapter levels, including the travel of participants to events and for each of our employee’s personal lifestyles, and have launched the CarbonCool offset program to allow designers to offset their own activities.
AIGA Center for Sustainable Design offers information, resources and a community of designers dedicated to environmentally responsible action. We have held conferences on sustainable practices, including “Compostmodern ’08,” presented by AIGA SF and the Center for Sustainable Design, and always include speakers committed to socially responsible design in our programs. In lieu of gifts to our speakers, we opt to fund projects that serve impoverished communities, such as the Project M water meter project in Hale County, Alabama.
Initiatives
Adopting principles and adapting our own practices hardly begin to ignite the potential of the profession in launching responsible change. The Aspen Design Summit encompasses a process for using design thinking and creativity to address major global problems. Beginning in 2008, an Aspen Design Challenge will be presented to design students worldwide each fall to seek their solutions to a specific global problem. This year’s addresses the challenge of protecting and providing safe water.
The challenge to students recognizes that designers can help solve these difficult problems and that the next generation is the one that must own the solution. Selected students’ work will then be promoted worldwide in forums that involve the world’s business and government leaders, such as the Aspen Institute and the World Economic Forum in Davos. AIGA is determined to see that the designer’s voice is among those heard on the significant issues facing the world today.
To paraphrase George Lois, designers have the power to defeat habit with creativity. There is no greater opportunity than sustaining the environment, humanity and civilization.
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Designers have an incredible opportunity to affect society whether they know it or not. I think our society is becoming more and more visual as time progresses and as this becomes true, the designer's role becomes increasingly important. They have the power to enlighten and educate through visual communications so the designer can now assume the role of not only a creative, but also the teacher, politician or someone who can change and influence for the social good.
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Designers are given the chance everyday to change the world. It is a designer’s responsibility to challenge these opportunities and provide creative solutions that will educate society. They must incorporate not just people, but the environment, and history in order to reach out and communicate effectively
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I (finally) joined AIGA last December and was perplexed by the shiny, plastic membership card I received, looking much like a "platinum" level credit card in finish, size and weight. The card displays my name, ID number, membership category, year joined and expiration date--exactly one year from the date I joined--and, on the reverse, the AIGA mission statement.
I pondered the existence of this card for some time and couldn't quite figure out how an organization of design professionals could produce a membership card with such a negative value-to-cost ratio. And, by cost, I mean more than the plastic it's printed on. With talk of "sustainable" design buzzing around for the past several years I'm surprised that AIGA distributes a plastic membership card, much less one that's only valid for a year. Nowhere on the card are listed the benefits for carrying it, so I question why I would even bother (I don't, in fact). This leads me to view it as an immediate part of my non-recyclable waste stream, now facilitated by AIGA. What do I do with it after a year's time? What do I do with it now?
I don't mean to sound disrespectful and apologize if this is not the proper forum to be posting such a comment. I just haven't seen this topic mentioned anywhere else on AIGA.org and wasn't sure why it wasn't up for discussion already. Has it been and I just missed it? -
Art, thanks for your comments and I want to assure you we, too, have been thinking about alternatives. Your questions are very appropriate and I am glad you asked.
There are two fundamental reasons for the membership card: 1) to ensure that a member can quickly reference his or her ID number, which, believe it or not, is the single most frequently asked question we receive by email and phone, and 2) to serve as an identifying marker for speedy, discounted or complimentary entry to events. Feedback from these cards has been, in general, very favorable.
For many years AIGA issued a membership card made of paper, which a large number of members thought was too insubstantial relative to its symbolism. We introduced the plastic card in 2005, and have been searching for a more sustainable solution for the past year. We hope to introduce a redesigned corn-based or recycled card in January 2009.
As a general practice, AIGA seeks to balance members’ needs and the commitment to sustainable practices. Please know that we have taken your comments into consideration and will continue to investigate alternate, environmentally sound solutions. We welcome any suggestions you, or other members, may have regarding this topic.
Lastly, to address your comment about member benefits, the most up-to-date information is available at www.aiga.org/benefits. Benefits are added throughout the year, so a listing on the card itself would almost always be incomplete (and there are too many to list!).
Thank you, Art, for raising this issue. Don’t worry, it will not go away. We are working to find the right solution.
Richard Grefé
Executive director, AIGA -
I appreciate the line, "Sustainability, as an outcome rather than a politically correct label, must deal with both human and natural dimensions." Sustainability has become a fad in many businesses and companies are jumping on the bandwagon to feed off the movement. True sustainability focuses on results--how humanity and the environment are helped and preserved.
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It's great that you guys are buying Carbon Credits for the ridiculous amount of mailings that you do. I would like for AIGA to seriously consider the impact of how much paper its members get sent. I understand that paper has strengths that email or other electronic media may lack but it loses its impact when a person receives a constant flood of it. For instance, in my office there are roughly 10 AIGA members, and for the latest GAIN mailing we received 14 mailers. 1 would have sufficed. And that's a solvable problem. Simply filter the mailing list to reduce the total number of instances.
Also, just out of curiosity, when AIGA figures up the amount of Carbon Credits to purchase, what's the formula? Does it involve just the manufacture or also all the associated shipping emissions? -
Daniel, I appreciate your comments on the amount of print materials your office receives. As a professional association, rather than a trade association, we consider individuals to be the members rather than the firm. Hence, the relationship is with individual professionals, which is why multiple copies arrive at your office. However, we will be offering an opt out option for print materials to members later this year.
And, yes, the extensive environmental inventory and analysis we undertake to estimate carbon offsets includes the shipping of raw materials, production and distribution.
Thanks for taking such a strong interest in AIGA's environmental practices.

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