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Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results Save | Export
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Jenny Ritchie – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
This paper considers 'democracy' with reference to education in the (neo)colonial context of Aotearoa (New Zealand). It discusses impacts of the western project of colonisation, arguing for the need to counter damaging hegemonic discourses such as white supremacy and racism that have underpinned and fuelled its operation. It identifies…
Descriptors: Ecology, Environmental Education, Colonialism, Neoliberalism
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Bryan Smith – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2024
The worlds we inhabit tell stories, stitched into the material and symbolic representations of the past that comes to define the features of our places. These stories are never neutral, anchored as they are in the intentional (re)presentation of a racialized white, masculine, and settler story as "our" story. Indeed, space, as an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Colonialism, Decolonization, Teaching Methods
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Bermúdez, Juan Pablo; Ramos-Martín, Juan – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2022
This article seeks to construct a conceptual proposal on governance from the perspective of the Pueblos del Centro (Colombia). Based on collaborative research tools, the aim is to recognize which are the main significant values for sovereignty and epistemic, cultural and political self-determination of 'other' knowledge.
Descriptors: Governance, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Social Justice
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Christy L. Oxendine – Qualitative Research Journal, 2024
Purpose: This paper centers a decolonial and Indigenous methodological approaches to educational history research. This research offers how "Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples" by Linda Tuhiwai Smith impacts one education historian's scholarship alongside conversations of historiography concerning the Lumbee…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Decolonization, Educational History, Indigenous Knowledge
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Ali, Tahir; Buergelt, Petra T.; Maypilama, Elaine Lawurrpa; Paton, Douglas; Smith, James A.; Jehan, Noor – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2022
Historically, non-Indigenous researchers have contributed to colonisation by research based on Western positivistic philosophical frameworks. This approach led to disembodying knowledge from Indigenous people's histories, worldviews, and cultural and social practices, thus perpetuating a deficit-based discourse which situates the responsibility of…
Descriptors: Systems Approach, Indigenous Knowledge, Researchers, Foreign Countries
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Manu Sharma; Peggy Shannon-Baker – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2023
This article takes a scholarship of teaching and learning approach to improve the authors teaching about Indigenous content as non-Indigenous teacher educators. It explores how they attempted to incorporate Indigenous content and teaching practices into multicultural education classes and then reflect on how they could have improved their teaching…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Indigenous Knowledge, Multicultural Education, Teacher Attitudes
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Regmi, Kapil Dev – Multicultural Education Review, 2022
Decolonization has multiple meanings and interpretations which reflect not necessarily the arbitrariness of the concept but the complex history of colonialism and the struggles that colonized people have endeavoured to carry on. The level of oppression and subjugation may vary, but there is hardly any one living in the global South (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Developing Nations, Decolonization, Epistemology
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Chunoo, Vivechkanand S.; Torres, Maritza – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2023
This article draws on critical race theory, intersectionality, critical feminism, queer and indigenous paradigms to critique existing approaches to leader/leadership identity development (LID) and to illuminate how people from marginalized and oppressed communities can experience more just and equitable pathways to leadership. It offers…
Descriptors: Leadership, Leaders, Self Concept, Critical Race Theory
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Elisabeth Moore – International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives, 2023
This paper delves into the innovative use of the potluck, or "pa'ina," as a metaphor to reimagine a research approach aimed at fostering collective understanding between non-Indigenous knowledge seekers and Indigenous knowledge guardians in Indigenous contexts. By embracing the broader context of research, this metaphor strives to create…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Pacific Islanders, Community Involvement, School Community Relationship
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Preeti – History of Education, 2022
Agricultural improvement was a vital aspect of the 'development scheme' of the British Government in India as agriculture was the most revenue-generating industry in Bihar. From the first Famine Commission Report of 1880, there was a set agenda to improve agriculture through education. This was to be achieved through importing western science and…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational History, Rural Areas, Power Structure
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Nakagawa, Satoru – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2021
In this article I will first address what decolonisation is with specific reference to the colonisation and enslavement (Nelson, 2006) of Indigenous peoples, specifically my own people, the Indigenous Amami of the former Ryukyu Kingdom. According to Laenui (2006), there were five steps of colonisation, many of which I suggest are not yet complete.…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Social Systems, Western Civilization, Indigenous Populations
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R'boul, Hamza – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2022
The enduring colonial-like relations among Northern and Southern spaces continue to influence knowledge production and dissemination. Critical scholarship on epistemic diversity in higher education has argued that knowledge circulation is often unilateral considering how global partnerships among universities and higher education models are still…
Descriptors: International Education, Higher Education, Colonialism, Cultural Pluralism
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Marshall, Norma; Antoine, Jurgita – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2023
Historical trauma began for Native people during European contact and the subsequent invasion of villages and cultural centers. Boarding school policies deliberately targeted Native families and social cohesion. The boarding school era was devastating to families and tribal entities as children were placed in institutions far away from their home…
Descriptors: American Indians, Indigenous Populations, Trauma, Empowerment
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Jamie L. Schissel – Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 2025
Drawing from humanizing pedagogies (Bartolome, 1994; del Carmen Salazar; Freire & Ramos, 1993) and humanizing research (Paris & Winn, 2013), in this article I propose an approach to "humanizing assessment" that begins with the position that inclusive and equitable educational opportunities and assessment practices that meet the…
Descriptors: Language Minorities, Decolonization, Humanism, Evaluation Methods
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Zeichner, Ken – Action in Teacher Education, 2020
This paper discusses the concept of democratic professionalism and argues that it offers a way to frame teacher education so that it can contribute to more productively managing long standing tensions between public schools, minoritized communities, and teacher preparation programs, and to more closely realizing the democratic potential of public…
Descriptors: Professionalism, Democratic Values, Indigenous Knowledge, Power Structure
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