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Guest Editors Introduction: Decolonizing Academia

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Articlepeer-review

Abstract

Engagements with decolonization and decoloniality in the contexts of curricular and pedagogical transformations are not new. Several symposiums, workshops, books, articles, and short pieces have engaged with this challenge, but still, the question remains: How to Decolonize Academia? Whatever extent to which we engage with this phenomenon, it seems that it will not be enough. The moment we find a decolonial solution to a colonial knowledge-making problem, another challenge erupts. As a result, it is important to conceive the exercise of decolonizing academia as an ongoing and inconclusive process. It is this insight that birthed this special issue on `Decolonizing Academia. This Special Issue has its origins in a symposium, held at Maynooth University on 27-28 October 2022, confronting urgent socio-political demands for academia to become more equitable, relevant, and transformative, while addressing challenges concerning knowledge hierarchies. The space and place where the symposium was conducted proved to be crucial context, as Maynooth University is a predominantly white, European cultural and intellectual space. The symposium was a brief, two-day intervention, in which black, brown, coloured, and other non-white bodies and voices disrupted the colonial sanctity and linearity of academic spaces. Hopefully, this disruption will remain symbolically etched within academias ideational and physical structures - its podiums, canteens, and corridors - on an ongoing basis.
Original languageEnglish (Ireland)
JournalIrish Journal Of Sociology
Volume24
Issue number2
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2024

Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)

  • Authors
  • Das, B; Dey, S; Khoo, S; Amoo-Adare, E

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