Makeshift Magazine Issue 12 (Laws and Orders) is available now on loremnotipsum.com. The Laws and Orders Issue of Makeshift is featuring India’s private eyes, homemade firearms in Egypt, and everyday superheroes working in the United States.
Makeshift Magazine is a quarterly print publication about creativity in unlikely places, from the favelas of Rio to the alleys of Delhi. These are environments where resources may be scarce, but where ingenuity is used incessantly for survival, enterprise, and a self-expression. Makeshift believes in an industrial future fueled by networks of makers, from roadside engineers to co-working creatives. The magazine is documenting a movement of hackers, sharers, and entrepreneurs innovating under resource constraints. It is about people, the things they make, and the context they make them in.
Content: Makeshift Magazine Issue 12 – Laws and Orders
- Self Control. After decades as refugees in the desert, Saharawis define their laws of the land through solidarity
- Justice Negotiators. For certain legal grievances, no judge or courtroom is needed to resolve
- Contraband Library. Slip pre-loaded USB drives in your pants to haul censored pages back to Communist China
- Copydesh. Lifting lines in Bangladesh is encouraged, with good reason
- Observed: Ferguson, US. A group of children add their creative contribution to a civil rights protest on West Florissant Avenue in Ferguson, Missouri…
- Marriage Detectives. Indian men and women seeking spouses online hire private eyes to suss out the liars and cheats
- Observed: Yemen. A Yemeni girl holds a handmade photo of her father, who has been in the Guantanamo Bay detention camp in Cuba her entire life