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Brandi Jean Nalani Balutski – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This dissertation surveys the development of the Hawaiian higher educational system in the 19th century Hawaiian Kingdom as a strategy of Hawaiian leadership in promoting and protecting Hawaiian independence. This analysis revisits a Hawaiian educational history canon that overwhelmingly credits missionaries and foreigners as imposing an…
Descriptors: Educational History, United States History, Higher Education, Land Settlement
Nasrin Mirsaleh-Kohan; Adesola Akinleye; Becky A. Rodriguez; Alana Taylor; Elisa De La Rosa; Raven Gallenstein; Holly Ann Griffin; Gillian Hayes; Kyndel Lee; Richard D. Sheardy – Science Education and Civic Engagement, 2024
Land Acknowledgements have become a ubiquitous part of universities. They purport to remember, honor, and bear witness to the future of Indigenous nations and to recognize the land and honor local Indigenous communities. While acknowledging the Indigenous peoples upon whose lands we work is an essential gesture, the authors join other scholars who…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Indigenous Populations, Land Settlement, Decolonization
Adam Joseph Barker; Jenny Pickerill – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2024
This paper asks how can we as geographers, occupying positions of relative privilege but also beholden to institutions entangled with legacies of colonialism and ongoing colonization, find and embody our responsibilities to Indigenous people and nations and contribute to decolonization within and beyond the academy? We begin by reflecting on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Decolonization, Universities, Indigenous Knowledge
Leonardo Veliz – International Journal of Multidisciplinary Perspectives in Higher Education, 2024
This reflection explores the critical importance of decolonization in higher education, emphasizing the recognition and integration of Indigenous knowledges and epistemologies into teacher education courses. Drawing from a critical conversation with a Chilean academic deeply engaged in decolonial practices, the discussion highlights how…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Indigenous Knowledge, Higher Education, Foreign Countries
Melanie Kloetzel – Journal of Dance Education, 2024
To date, there has been minimal analysis of the intersections between dance pedagogy and the climate crisis. Arguing that it is essential to approach the climate crisis via the lens of decolonization and underscoring the indivisible links between modernity, coloniality, and the climate emergency, the author considers what it might mean to develop…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Decolonization, Climate, Ethics
Corrie Whitmore; Erik Carlson – College Teaching, 2024
Land acknowledgments are one step that educators and institutions can take to begin realigning their relationship with Indigenous peoples. However, many fear doing more harm than good when taking the first step of doing a land acknowledgment. In this paper an instructor who overcame such hesitation and an Indigenous faculty member share a six item…
Descriptors: Land Settlement, Indigenous Populations, Decolonization, College Faculty
Wark, Joe – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
Land acknowledgements have become almost ubiquitous in post-secondary education settings in Canada. However, the origins and widespread popularity of these practices has gone largely unexamined. In this article, the literature on land acknowledgement practices in Canada is reviewed, focusing in particular on the growing criticisms of these…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Land Settlement, Canada Natives, Postsecondary Education
J. Hurdle – Journal of Agricultural Education, 2025
The land-grant system's tripartite mission of teaching, research, and Extension was intended to improve the American livelihood while making contributions to the advancement of U.S. agriculture and economic development. To date, historical analyses within the field of agricultural education have focused on special interest topics rather than a…
Descriptors: Agricultural Education, United States History, Land Grant Universities, Educational Legislation
Atay, Elaine; Murry, Adam – Papers on Postsecondary Learning and Teaching, 2023
Improving post-secondary outcomes and retention of Indigenous students may require interventions such as culturally appropriate mentorship. "Mainstream" mentorship perspectives and practices developed within places of Western education and employment may be limited in their ability to address the unique cultural considerations and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Minority Group Students, Mentors, Culturally Relevant Education
Le Grange, Lesley – Curriculum Journal, 2023
In the past two decades, we have seen a renewed interest in decolonisation. A proliferation of literature produced on the topic, the establishment of journals on decolonisation, student protests such as the #RhodesMustFall campaign at universities in South Africa and Oxford University in Britain, French President Emmanuel Macron's call for the…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Racism, Social Justice, Teacher Education
Sergio Fernando Juárez; C. Kyle Rudick – Communication Education, 2024
The history of higher education in the United States is deeply rooted in colonialism. The communication discipline and the field of communication, teaching, and learning find themselves unable to completely sever their ties to settler/colonialism, white supremacy, and other dehumanizing ideologies. As the authors navigate the complexities of…
Descriptors: Educational History, Higher Education, Decolonization, Communications
Helen Fisher – History of Education, 2024
This article examines the ways in which the University of Birmingham assisted refugee academics and students from Nazi Germany and other Nazi occupied countries across Europe between 1933 and 1945. It draws on the university's rich but underused archives to explore institutional policy and to assess the influence of individual staff members in…
Descriptors: Educational History, Refugees, War, Universities
Benjamin E. Norquist; Christopher S. Collins – Comparative Education Review, 2024
This article analyzes the perceptions and actions of Palestinian faculty and administrators at colleges and universities in Palestinian Bethlehem. We explore the meaning of higher educational practices and structures under settler colonial conditions of gradual dispossession of ancestral land. The physical conditions and policies of occupation and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Change, Resistance to Change, Land Settlement
Kenway, Jane; Howard, Adam – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
Elite universities are often believed to represent education's gold standard and to produce highly educated luminaries who rightfully take their places leading all the institutions that matter in societies across the world. We begin by explaining how this is so. Then we discuss what we call monster methodologies, suggesting why and how we employed…
Descriptors: Colleges, Foreign Countries, Land Settlement, Figurative Language
Álvarez Valencia, José Aldemar; Miranda, Norbella – Teaching in Higher Education, 2022
This study addresses the role of Indigenous students in higher education regarding the practices of recognition and invisibilization of linguistic, ontological, and epistemic identities. We focus on a Colombian university and examine how Indigenous students contest and reshape the legacies of coloniality that permeate cultural, academic, and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Undergraduate Students, Multilingualism