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Weaving Together a Decolonial Imaginary Through Design for Effective River Management: Pluriversal Ontological Design in Practice
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2022
Year
DecolonialityCultural HeritageSustainable DevelopmentEducationSocial SciencesSustainable DesignInterdisciplinary DesignSocial DesignWorld-makingOntological DesignRiver Basin ManagementDesignPluriversal Ontological DesignRiver RestorationWater ResourcesEffective River ManagementWater HeritageIndigenous Knowledge SystemsNew ZealandDesign ThinkingSustainabilityAnthropologySocial Anthropology
Abstract Looking at how we, as designers, can move beyond charges of neo-colonialism in social design, this article uses the empirical example of a design project focused on the restoration of a riverine system in New Zealand to provide an outline of ways that pluriversal ontological design can occur in practice. Exploring how the use of design tools and frameworks (e.g., boundary objects and infrastructuring) can help build out a decolonial imaginary, the article demonstrates how— through our design practice— we are able to successfully acknowledge, and work with, different “ways of being” in the world.