The complexity of social and ecological crises and the need for collective action to tackle them brought forth collective inquiry as an... Show moreThe complexity of social and ecological crises and the need for collective action to tackle them brought forth collective inquiry as an essential capacity for societies to combine their knowledge and creativity, navigate complexity, and respond with adaptive solutions. However, current approaches to sensemaking often remain anchored in the same mindsets and worldviews that underpin these crises, constraining their ability to account for the fundamental shifts needed. This research addresses this gap by exploring how collective inquiry, when framed as a narrative practice, can open space for alternative perspectives and pathways in systems transformation. This study positions narratives as dynamic meaning systems that shape how groups interpret issues, determine relevance, and envision new possibilities. The dissertation is structured as three studies, situated in the context of food systems, each exploring ways to engage and mobilize these meaning systems across different contexts and scales of collective inquiry. A central contribution of this research is the framework of narrative infrastructures—the social and material contexts through which narratives of change are constructed, circulated, and sustained within systems change efforts. This framework supports designers in navigating and shaping the spaces where narratives are articulated, contested, and maintained, to foster more critical, pluralistic, and transformative approaches to collective inquiry. Ultimately, this work enhances design’s capacity to foster the shifts in mindsets through which societies envision their collective futures, using its narrative agency to disrupt harmful paradigms and open space for radical possibilities in the making. Show less