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Knowledge and Decolonial Politics

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Knowledge and Decolonial Politics: A Critical Reader offers the perspectives of educators and learners within current developmental settings, highlighting the systemic barriers faced whilst trying ...
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  • 30 August 2018
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Knowledge and Decolonial Politics: A Critical Reader offers the perspectives of educators and learners within current developmental settings, highlighting the systemic barriers faced whilst trying to implement decolonial pedagogies and practices. In the hope to challenge the dominance of Western Eurocentric thought in education and international development, the authors of this book offer counter narratives to promote the use of embodied cultural knowledges and histories, along with Indigenous perspectives, in order to subvert Western knowledge systems which are inherently colonial in nature. Changing education as we know it today requires creating spaces in which multiple knowledges can co-exist and benefit from one another. These spaces will ensure the continuity of decolonial practices and shape the intellectual politics of future generations.

Contributors are: Olivia Aiello, Nana Bediako-Amoah, Shirleen Datt, George J. Sefa Dei, Chisani Doyle-Wood, Candice Griffith, Mandeep Jajj, Wambui Karanja and Lwanga G. Musisi.
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Price: $137.00
Pages: 148
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Anti-colonial Educational Perspectives for Transformative Change
Publication Date: 30 August 2018
ISBN: 9789004380042
Format: Hardcover
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George J. Sefa Dei is Professor of Social Justice Education and Director of the Centre for Integrative Anti-Racism Studies at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto (OISE/UT). He has published extensively in the area of anti-racism education, Black/African and minority schooling, Indigenous knowledges and anti-colonial thought.
Mandeep Jajj is a graduate student in the Department of Social Justice Education at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto. Her research interests lie in anti-colonial, anti-racism, and decolonizing theories, along with development and modernization discourses. Mandeep’s current research explores western “development” theories in relation to issues of economics and education.