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Pluralism attribution

 Here is a list of some scholars, edited collections and projects that develop, apply or critique the ideas in Arturo Escobar’s *Designs for the Pluriverse: Radical Interdependence, Autonomy, and the Making of Worlds (2018) — especially around decolonial, pluriversal and relational design. 

#ReferenceAnnotation (in relation to Escobar’s thesis)
1Decolonial Pluriversalism (Ed. Zahra Ali & Sonia Dayan-Herzbrun, 2024) Bloomsbury PublishingAn edited volume that explores “pluriversalism” beyond Eurocentric universalism. While not strictly design only, it offers philosophical and aesthetic perspectives that complement Escobar’s ontological design project.
2Pluriversal Worlding: Design, Narratives, and Metaphors for Societal Transformation by Renata M. Leitão (2023) fmkjournals.fmk.edu.rsExplicitly links design, narratives and the concept of the pluriverse. Helps trace how designers are thinking about “world‐building” rather than mere product design 
3Pluriversal Spaces for Decolonizing Design: Exploring Decolonial Directions for Participatory Design by Nicholas Baroncelli Torretta et al. (2023) ojs.uc.cl+1A participatory design case/analysis that talks about “pluriversal participation”, “pluriversal presence” and “pluriversal directionality”. Useful for moving from high theory (Escobar) into concrete design research/practice.
4Towards PluriversalityDecolonising Design Research and Practices by Rachel Charlotte Smith, Heike Winschiers-Theophilus, Rogerio Abreu de Paula, et al. (2024) pure.au.dkA recent special-issue/editorial focusing on how design research itself can be decolonised and oriented toward “pluriversality”. Very relevant for a critique of Western hegemonic design and interest in Indigenous relational epistemologies.
5Critical Strategies for Ecological Architectures: Pluriversal‑Bioregional‑Decolonial by Mathias Rollot (2025) SpringerLinkWhile architecture-oriented, this book explicitly uses the frame of “pluriversal-bioregional-decolonial” strategies. Extends Escobar’s ideas into ecological built-environment contexts — aligning with ecological/feminist concerns.
6Decolonial Cultural Practices: Towards Pluriversal Cultural Institutions and Policies (Ed. Meike Lettau & Özlem Canyürek, 2025) RoutledgeThough focused on cultural institutions/policies, this collection engages with decolonial pluriversalism in practice. It helps to situate the  discussion of symbolic systems, hegemonies and institutional power 
7Future design narratives: an interdisciplinary approach to a decolonial glossary by Victoria Rodriguez Schön & Manuela Celi (2024) Cambridge University Press & AssessmentFocuses on language and lexicon in design from a decolonial/pluriversal perspective — tying into symbolic systems and how they embed power and ontology.
8Pluriversal Design: A Virtual Decolonising Exhibition (Kambunga, Smith, Winschiers-Theophilus et al., 2021) dl.eusset.euA project-based demonstration of pluriversal design in multiple global contexts (Australia, Ghana, Greenland etc). —linking theory to praxis.
9Design Research Society (Pluriversal Design SIG: PluriSIG) – initiative by Lesley-Ann Noel & Renata Leitão DRSNot a publication per se, but a network/resource hub. Their reading lists, discussions and reference libraries can point you to further works (including Escobar + related authors). Useful for expanding the bibliography.
10Designs for the Pluriverse: Radical Interdependence, Autonomy, and the Making of Worlds by Arturo Escobar (2018) Wikipedia+1It sets out the ontological design frame, critique of modernity/coloniality and articulation of the pluriverse.

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