Learning Disobedience

Learning Disobedience

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This is a book about teaching 'disobedient pedagogies' from the heart of the empire. The authors show how educators, activists, and students are cultivating anti-racist decolonial practices, leading with a radical call to eradicate development studies, and counterbalancing this with new projects to decolonize development, particularly in African geographies.
Being intentionally disobedient in the classroom is central to decolonizing development studies. The authors ask: What does it mean to study international development today? Whose knowledge and perspectives inform international development policy and programming?
Building on the works of other decolonial trailblazers, the authors show how colonial legacies continue to shape the ways in which land, wellbeing, progress, and development are conceived of and practiced. How do we, through our classroom and activist practices, work collaboratively to create the radical imaginaries and practical scaffolding we need for decolonizing development?
A new addition to the growing body of work on radical pedagogies, decolonial options and decolonising the university
'Murrey and Daley take no prisoners in their sharp decolonial analysis, they are not apologetic in their decolonial critique development, and they are fired up in their envisioning of the future. 'Learning Disobedience' is far from a post-development treatise, it is a work of dismantlement of that which harms humanity in the name of humanity.'
Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni, author of 'Beyond the Coloniality of Internationalism: Reworlding the World from the Global South' 'This is the book we've all been waiting for to divest from Development Studies. It engages the abolitionist imperative as imaginable, intelligible, and doable; as a labour of love, solidarity and abundance rather than refusal or 'cancel culture'.'
Olivia Umurerwa Rutazibwa, Assistant Professor in Human Rights and Politics, Department of Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science?
Amber Murrey is an Associate Professor of Political Geography at the University of Oxford and a Fellow at Mansfield College, Oxford. Her award-winning scholarship on political ecologies and economies in Central Africa focuses on dissent and resistance amidst racialised extractive violence. Amber is the editor of 'A Certain Amount of Madness': The Life, Politics and Legacies of Thomas Sankara and Associate Editor of The African Geographical Review.
Patricia Daley is Professor of the Human Geography of Africa, and Vice-Principal and The Helen Morag Fellow in Geography at Jesus College, Oxford. She is an editor of the Routledge Encyclopaedia of African Studies; a member of the Editorial Advisory Board for Gender, Place and Culture; and a member of the interdisciplinary advisory board of the International Relations journal.
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Learning Disobedience from the Heart of Empire
1. Coloniality, Racial Logics and the Ethos of International Development
2. Impoverishment is an Active process: Capitalism and Development
3. Development and Violence/Development as Violence
4. Development Without the Peoples of the Global South
5. Resistance and Autonomous Spaces Beyond the NGO: Marronage, Social Movements and Hashtag Dissent
6. Critiquing Heteronormativity and the Male Gaze: Queering Development and Beyond
7. Decolonizing the State and Reworlding: Global Imaginaries of Liberated Futures
8. Beyond Tokenism: Pluriversals and Decolonizing Solidarity for Thriving and Dignified Futures
Conclusions
Index

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Dimensions 1 × 6 × 9 in