Design Agenda

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Design Agenda logo, circa 2000[1]

Design Agenda was a design related think tank associated with the libertarian anti-environmental LM network. It was founded via events in 1994 and 1995 by Alex Cameron, Nico Macdonald and Kevin McCullagh, all of whom were reportedly members or supporters of the Revolutionary Communist Party.[2][3]

According to internal RCP documents RCP members 'initiated a meeting entitled 'What should be the Design Agenda for the 90s?'. 'Attended by around 35 people' this meeting 'resolved to organise a debate entitled "Do designers need design history?"'. Held at Islington Business Design Centre on 14 July 1994, this was subsequently listed as a Design Agenda debate.[4] A second event was held at the Design Museum in 1995 titled 'Beyond fear & envy: demystifying Japanese design' (15 July 1995). The point of the conference was, according to Kevin McCullagh, 'to get beyond the stereotypes of Japanese design.'[4] It 'coincided with the start of the VJ-Day anniversary'.[3]

Cross-promotion of other LM network associates

Following the pattern of all other LM network organisations Design Agenda consistently promoted other associates of the network. At their second conference Beyond fear & envy: demystifying Japanese design held at the Design Museum on 15 July 1995, speakers included LM network associate James Woudhuysen.[4]

In 2000 it published a book by leading former RCP acdre James Heartfield[5]


Notes

  1. Design Agenda, Retrieved from the Internet Archive of 11 May 2000, on 10 November 2011
  2. Design Agenda Who, retrieved from the Internet Archive of 21 June 2000, accessed 10 November 2011
  3. 3.0 3.1 Rasing our profile in the bourgeois world in Our tasks and methods discussion, RCP internal document, circa 1996, p. 5.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Plan Kevin McCullagh Profile, accessed 10 November 2011
  5. James Heartfield, Great Expectations: The Creative Industries in the New Economy, Design Agenda, 15 Jun 2000, ISBN-10: 0953875806