Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Pluriversal Spaces for Decolonizing Design: Exploring Decolonial Directions for Participatory Design

View through CrossRef
Decolonization is a situated effort as it relates to the relations of privilege, power, politics, and access (3P-A, in Albarrán González’s terms) between the people involved in design in relation to wider societies. This complexity creates certain challenges for how we can understand, learn about, and nurture decolonization in design towards pluriversality, since such decolonizing effort is based on the relationship between specific individuals and the collective. In this paper, we present and discuss the ‘River project’, a participatory space for decolonizing design, created for designers and practitioners to reflect on their own 3P-A as a way to create awareness of their own oppressive potential in design work. These joint reflections challenged ideas of participation and shaped learning processes between the participants, bringing to the foreground the importance of seeing and allowing for a plurality of life and work worlds to be brought together. We build on the learnings from this project to propose the notions of pluriversal participation, pluriversal presence, and pluriversal directionality, which can help nurture decolonizing designs towards pluriversality. We conclude by arguing that, for nurturing pluriversality through Participatory Design, participation, presence, and direction must be equally pluriversal.
Title: Pluriversal Spaces for Decolonizing Design: Exploring Decolonial Directions for Participatory Design
Description:
Decolonization is a situated effort as it relates to the relations of privilege, power, politics, and access (3P-A, in Albarrán González’s terms) between the people involved in design in relation to wider societies.
This complexity creates certain challenges for how we can understand, learn about, and nurture decolonization in design towards pluriversality, since such decolonizing effort is based on the relationship between specific individuals and the collective.
In this paper, we present and discuss the ‘River project’, a participatory space for decolonizing design, created for designers and practitioners to reflect on their own 3P-A as a way to create awareness of their own oppressive potential in design work.
These joint reflections challenged ideas of participation and shaped learning processes between the participants, bringing to the foreground the importance of seeing and allowing for a plurality of life and work worlds to be brought together.
We build on the learnings from this project to propose the notions of pluriversal participation, pluriversal presence, and pluriversal directionality, which can help nurture decolonizing designs towards pluriversality.
We conclude by arguing that, for nurturing pluriversality through Participatory Design, participation, presence, and direction must be equally pluriversal.

Related Results

Power, Position and Practice: Conscientisation and decolonial solidarity of Southeast Asian migrants in Aotearoa
Power, Position and Practice: Conscientisation and decolonial solidarity of Southeast Asian migrants in Aotearoa
<p dir="ltr"><b>Scholars have conceptualised decolonial solidarity through notions of reciprocity, relationality, and mutuality. In Aotearoa New Zealand, constitutional...
Decolonizing Approaches to Latin American Social Movements
Decolonizing Approaches to Latin American Social Movements
Abstract This chapter introduces decolonizing approaches as a perspective from which to study Latin American social movements. Decolonizing approaches allow us to su...
A participatory design informed framework for information behaviour studies
A participatory design informed framework for information behaviour studies
Introduction. Applying participatory design in educational contextscan improve the congruence between perceptions of students, teachers and instructional designers.Information beha...
Design
Design
Conventional definitions of design rarely capture its reach into our everyday lives. The Design Council, for example, estimates that more than 2.5 million people use design-related...
Decolonizing “Community” in Community Psychology
Decolonizing “Community” in Community Psychology
AbstractThis article endeavors to craft pathways that disrupt dominant modes of knowledge production and imagine nonhierarchical epistemic possibilities in teaching community psych...
Spatial Aspects of De-Radicalisation Processes
Spatial Aspects of De-Radicalisation Processes
This report synthesises the city reports of the “Spatial aspects of de-radicalisation” work package from the D.Rad project. Within this work package, we studied mechanisms of inclu...
Aesthesis decolonial y los tiempos relacionales Entrevista a Rolando Vázquez
Aesthesis decolonial y los tiempos relacionales Entrevista a Rolando Vázquez
RESUMEN Hay que pensar la decolonialidad en relación a las artes. En esta entrevista exploramos cómo las artes decoloniales se diferencian de la estética moderna/colonial. La decol...
Transdisciplinariedad decolonial de la Educación Matemática
Transdisciplinariedad decolonial de la Educación Matemática
La transdisciplinariedad no siempre es decolonial, ha tenido rezagos modernistas, postmodernistas y de allí coloniales. Desde el proyecto transmodernista, el transparadigma transco...

Back to Top