“…The catch cries of the WSF-'Another World Is Possible' and 'There Are Many Alternatives' (as opposed to Margaret Thatcher's claim that 'There Is No Alternative')-are evidence of this commitment to address the dominance of particular knowledge structures globally (see, for example, Bello, 1999;De Sousa Santos, 2014;George, 2004;Klein, 2000). Secularism's in-built self-justificatory logic, that it is neutral, at least as far as the value of different 'religions' are concerned, and universal, as opposed to 'religious', spiritual, and cosmological worldviews, which are subjective and culturally specific, has for a long time contributed to obscuring the relationship between secularism and epistemological injustice, although this is increasingly being highlighted by scholars in global justice theory and practice (Conway, 2013;Daulatzai, 2004;Smith & Smythe, 2017, this volume;Wilson, 2010Wilson, , 2017.…”