Out of the four Keynotes, I personally liked the Alain Findelli's (University of Nimes) talk for its broader historiographical nature. He critically reflected the journey of design in the last hundred years across the world. At the same time, I feel that it was inevitably Eurocentric until he discussed contemporary cases of community resilience and co-design from North Africa.
ICDHS is a platform which seeks to challenge the existing histories of design by presenting otherwise 'peripheral' versions. There was a significant participation from Latin America, Scandinavian nations, Japan and Taiwan. My paper from India fitted well into the purpose of the conference. In the coming years, ICDHS seeks to decolonise the discourse of Design too. I hope the design, architecture and planning educators from India will contribute to the larger movement of decolonisation.