Rehumanising the university for an alternative future: decolonisation,alternative epistemologies and cognitive justice |
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Authors: | Marcelle C. Dawson |
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Affiliation: | 1. Sociology, Gender Studies and Criminology, School of Social Sciences, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand;2. Centre for Social Change, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africamarcelle.dawson@otago.ac.nz |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTReflecting on the shifting landscape of higher education, this discussion highlights how inequality is entrenched within the university, largely as a result of Western-inspired, commodified knowledge production processes. The article grapples with scholarship on cognitive justice and builds a case for transformative resistance that is simultaneously anti-colonial and anti-neoliberal, within, against and beyond the Westernised university. The discussion concentrates specifically on epistemic hegemonies and internationalisation, and argues that substantive decolonisation as a counterhegemonic project must entail an intellectual element that is aimed at transforming the knowledge structures that facilitate dehumanisation. The pursuit of more equitable, anti-racist futures must thus involve the identification and obliteration of deeply embedded epistemic hegemonies, which have been created through the dehumanising processes of capital expansion and colonisation. This article offers a hopeful approach that encourages the collaborative creation of a counter-university that actively pursues epistemic diversity as a pathway to alternative futures. |
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Keywords: | Decolonisation cognitive justice alternative epistemologies global neo-colonialism internationalisation of higher education alternative futures |
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