Learning disobedience : decolonizing development studies / Amber Murrey and Patricia Daley.
Material type: TextPublisher: London : Pluto Press, 2023Description: viii, 246 pages : illustrations ; 22 cmISBN:- 9780745347141
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | TBS Barcelona | HC28 MUR SOON AVAILABLE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available |
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HC79.T4 SCH Shaping the fourth industrial revolution | HC79.15 LOW Give people money | HC85 BRE Natural Resource Management and the Circular Economy | HC28 MUR SOON AVAILABLE Learning disobedience : decolonizing development studies | HC59.15 KEL New rules for the new economy : 10 radical strategies for a connected world | HC59.72.T4 CUE Innovating for the middle of the pyramid in emerging countries | HC59.72.T4 CUE Innovating for the middle of the pyramid in emerging countries |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Learning disobedience from the heart of empire — Coloniality, racial logics and the ethos of international development — Impoverishment is an active process: capitalism and development — Development and violence/development as violence — Development without the peoples of the global south — Resistance and autonomous spaces beyond the NGO: marronage, social movements and hashtag dissent — Critiquing heteronormativity and the male gaze: queering development and beyond — Decolonizing the state and reworlding: global imaginaries of liberated futures — Beyond tokenism: pluriversals and decolonizing solidarity for thriving and dignified futures.
"This is a book about teaching with disobedient pedagogies from the heart of 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. Building on the works of other decolonial trailblazers, the authors show how colonial legacies continue to shape the ways in which land, well-being, 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? Being intentionally disobedient in the classroom is central to decolonizing development studies"-- Provided by publisher