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DPU collaborative project wins RIBA President’s Awards for Research 2021

25 January 2022

"The submission, "Will I Cause Harm?", was prepared by The Bartlett School of Architecture's David Roberts, Jane Rendell and Yael Padan, and the DPU's Emmanuel Osuteye and DPU PhD candidate Ariana Markowitz, and was selected as a winner for the annual theme: education.

RIBA

The submission was initially sortlisted by RIBA in December 2021, and is part of practisingethics.org a collaboration between two long term projects, The Bartlett Ethics Commission and KNOW (Knowledge in Action for Urban Equality) work package 'Ethics of Research Practice,' led by Jane Rendell. We are delighted that the submission has now been announced as a winner in the Annual theme: Education.

‘Practising Ethics Guides’ are a pioneering open-access educational tool for emerging and established built environment practitioners to teach themselves and others how to identify ethical dilemmas that may arise in research and practice, negotiate their ethical responsibilities, and rehearse strategies to navigate unpredictable environments with care and creativity. They are designed as an accessible point of reference at all stages of a project – from planning and conducting activities in the field to communicating and staging work. Rather than a regulatory hurdle, they consider ethics as an opportunity to enrich architectural practice through reflexive curiosity and critical investigation. 

A series of Practising Ethics Guides offer insights into how to negotiate the difficult ‘ethical moments’ that different built environment research methods and contexts pose, and develop an ethical practice as a built environment researcher. They are a pioneering open-access educational tool for emerging and established built environment practitioners to teach themselves and others how to identify ethical dilemmas that may arise in research and practice, negotiate their ethical responsibilities, and rehearse strategies to navigate unpredictable environments with care and creativity.

Insightful and imaginative architectural practice encompasses a range of sites, contexts, and communities, and it is important to consider the benefits, risks, and harms to all connected with and affected by it. ‘Practising Ethics Guides’ are the result of an interdisciplinary collaboration between two long term projects exploring ethical protocols for built environment practitioners and strengthening pathways to urban equality, with particular attention to the western-centric bias of ethical values which privilege the individual over the communal or collective. Together, this work illuminates how the relationship between universal ethical principles and specific ethical processes is situated within particular contexts. These guides help navigate this relationship through generative questions as prompts to reflect on potential ethical considerations, guidelines that illuminate concerns, and actions that embody ethical principles.

‘Practising Ethics Guides’ offer insights from experienced built environment researchers. They are designed as an accessible point of reference at all stages of a project – from planning, to conducting activities in the field, to communicating and staging work. Rather than a regulatory hurdle, they consider ethics as an opportunity to enrich architectural practice through reflexive curiosity and critical investigation. Thinking through ethics compels us to grapple with ideas of enduring value, to question our position, and to expound what practitioners we want to be. The guides are shared via an open-access website and have already been embedded across international architectural education programmes.

Find out more about Bartlett shortlisted projects here, and the winning entries here.

Image: Judit Ferencz, “Halima cooking,” (2015), pencil on paper, 297 x 420 mm.