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Ruth Heilbronn – Ethics and Education, 2025
What does decolonising the curriculum (DtC) entail and is it possible in the current context? I distinguish between a thick and thin idea of DtC. Thick DtC acknowledges that alternative knowledge systems exist, other than our western view of knowledge as 'justified true belief'. Thick DtC calls for recognition of epistemic injustice to indigenous…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Curriculum Development, Indigenous Populations, Cultural Awareness
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Erin Kahunawaika'ala Wright; Jennifer Mahealani Ah Sing Quirk – Journal of College and Character, 2024
We examine the meaning and salience of social justice and solidarity building in higher education for Indigenous peoples through the lens of Indigenous resurgence. Indigenous resurgence centers Indigenous worldviews to guide our understanding and behavior while also prioritizing relationality to determine where and how to build solidarities with…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Hawaiians, Social Justice, Higher Education
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Sultana, Ronald G. – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2023
This paper draws on the fund of regional knowledge about career guidance that comparative research has generated in the "global South". The goal of the paper is to add another voice to the challenge to the universalising language that characterises career guidance theory and practice, and to further highlight the serious attention that…
Descriptors: Postcolonialism, Career Guidance, Epistemology, Social Justice
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Sarah Urquhart – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
Ecologically, lichen plays a significant role in the formation of flourishing ecosystems by breaking apart rock formations using small fungal threads to form fertile soil which supports a growing complexity/diversity of life. This essay uses lichen as a metaphor to describe fossilized constructs (colonial epistemologies and ontologies,…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Biological Sciences, Ecology, Biodiversity
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Kevin Klein-Cardeña – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
A critique of both homogenizing and vertical power runs through the Zapatista social project in Chiapas, Mexico, lending a distinctive character to both Zapatismo's political vision of self-governance and to the educational vision of its community schools. Zapatismo's critical practices may thus offer valuable contributions to antifascist praxis…
Descriptors: Authoritarianism, Social Justice, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations
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Shay, Marnee – Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 2022
Epistemic and professional justice cannot occur without social justice. Politically astute scholarship should consider the pervasive injustice that indigenous people continue to face in their own country. The Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education (APJTE) can consider its role in this as a publisher -- if there is a paper that is about…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Professional Identity
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Miguel Del Pino; Katerin Arias-Ortega; Gerardo Muñoz – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2025
The structure of the national educational system negatively affects the recognition of indigenous Mapuce people, who have been affected with regards to love, equal treatment and social esteem, as understood from the social justice approach of recognition described by Axel Honneth. This is evident in the indigenous knowledge and practices that have…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Native Language, Social Justice, Foreign Countries
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Gift Sonkqayi – Educational Review, 2024
Epistemicide occurs when one knowledge is exalted at the expense of local or indigenous knowledge systems leading to the demise of such knowledge systems. In this article, I focus on how some conceptions and ways of incorporating indigenous knowledge systems seem to be entangled in the same misnomer to which they owe their existence (i.e. a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Epistemology, Indigenous Knowledge, Misconceptions
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Reeploeg, Silke – History Education Research Journal, 2023
In a 2017 book chapter on the continuing erasure of Indigenous epistemes in academia, the Sami scholar Rauna Kuokkanen posed an important question: is it acceptable for a site of learning to be so ignorant? Foregrounding Indigenous scholarship from the Arctic, this article examines the potential of history education to address this question. Based…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Thinking Skills, Indigenous Knowledge, Epistemology
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Meaney, Tamsin; Fyhn, A. B.; Graham, S. R. W. – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2022
To increase possibilities for listening respectfully to Indigenous educators, there is a need to identify conversational prompts which are used to raise alternative views of social justice about mathematics education for Indigenous students. Using Nancy Fraser's description of abnormal social justice, an analysis was made of transcripts from round…
Descriptors: Mathematics Teachers, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Mathematics Education
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Bekithemba Dube; Nathan Moyo – Research Papers in Education, 2023
This study undertakes a decolonial reading of the Zimbabwean history curriculum as an exemplar of how knowledge and pedagogy could be reframed as the basis for curricular justice in a global imaginary that is predicated on the epistemic hegemony of the Global North. The study which is framed as a conceptual research article introduces and argues…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Decolonization, Historiography, History Instruction
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Chinmayi Jayakumar; Suganya Sankaran; P. Gangadharan – Contemporary Education Dialogue, 2024
This article explores the conceptualisation of alternative education based on the lived realities of marginalised indigenous communities. By amplifying the voices of the Bettakurumba, Kattunayakan, Mullakurumba and Paniya communities, the article explores their vision for an alternative education system that promotes equality and justice, and the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Nontraditional Education
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Bastida, Ernesto L., Jr.; Quimbo, Maria Ana T.; Ortega-Dela Cruz, Ruth A.; Serrano, Evelie P.; Paunlagui, Merlyne M.; Centeno, Edmund G. – Online Submission, 2023
This study proposes a rights-based instructional planning approach for teachers serving indigenous learners, particularly those assigned to schools in Higaonon communities (IPEd). The content of the paper focuses on the following: (1) assumptions about Higaonon indigenous learners; (2) components of the right-based instructional planning approach;…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Legislation, Foreign Countries, Elementary Secondary Education
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Mullen, Carol A. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2022
A settler colonial educator of European descent, I write as an uninvited guest on Indigenous land. Truths of the past are determining the future of humanity, a contribution that allyship can make. In this article, I share vital information and critical ideas that underscore the importance of allyship in the contexts of settler colonialism and…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Activism
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Jessica Ostrow Michel; Peter Siciliano; Michaela Zint; Sarah Collins – International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, 2024
Purpose:: One of the rapidly growing bodies of literature on sustainability in higher education focuses on the competencies students should master to bring about the necessary transformation toward a sustainable future. Given the influential nature of this particular scholarship on curricula and programs, this study aims to assess its trajectory…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Sustainability, Futures (of Society), Bibliometrics
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