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Showing 1 to 15 of 110 results Save | Export
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
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Lorenzo Lazaro Sánchez-Gatt; Saleel Adarkar Menon; Juliet Hess – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2025
Transcultural pedagogy, or what is often described as world music pedagogy, in U.S. and Canadian classrooms often utilizes an extractive logic, serving to essentialize culture, invisibilize logics that are incongruent to European, Canadian, and U.S.-centric epistemologies, and uphold the goal of white assimilation under the guise of…
Descriptors: Music Education, Colonialism, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences
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Hyena Kim – Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
Overwhelming waste is one of the most compelling issues that contemporary environmental and sustainability education (ESE) should address. Understanding waste as an embodiment and offspring of ongoing colonial relations in the Capitalocene, I explore how ESE could perform a string figure with a wasted world by decolonizing more-than-human…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Environmental Education, Sanitation, Decolonization
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Marco Ambrosi De la Cadena – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
Colonization has traditionally been studied as a monological and definitive period. This article seeks to problematize its analysis by means of the so-called 'philosophy of desire' and 'rhizomatic thinking', enriching them, in methodological terms, by the Actor-Network-Theory. In this vein, an alternative explanation of the colonial regime is…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Land Settlement, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations
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Jacinta Po-Ching; Michael Harcourt; Haimana Hirini – set: Research Information for Teachers, 2024
Teachers can respond to the climate crisis through deliberate choices about what and how to teach. We suggest that, for history teachers, this requires stepping outside traditional topics that often focus on political change. Instead, they need to select contexts for learning that illustrate how global forces of colonisation impact the ecology of…
Descriptors: Climate, Indigenous Knowledge, History Instruction, Land Settlement
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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
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Ambo, Theresa – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2023
This article addresses the limits of social justice and leadership frameworks in addressing the concerns and desires of Indigenous Peoples and communities, particularly settler colonialism, sovereignty, and self-determination. I ask readers to contend with the following question: How can social justice and leadership models be more inclusive of…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Models, Leadership Styles, Indigenous Populations
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Rose-Anne Reynolds; Karin Murris – Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
Inspired by Karen Barad's agential realism and Donna Haraway's use of the Chthulucene, our paper profoundly troubles and unsettles the humanist subject that has been the cause of so much trouble. Re-turning to a government primary school in Cape Town as the "research site," we adopt temporal and spatial diffraction as a postqualitative…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Climate, Environmental Education, Elementary Schools
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Scott Jukes; Kathryn Riley – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
In this article, we experiment with a form of dark pedagogy, a pedagogy that confronts haunting pasts-presents-futures in environmental education. We offer a conceptualisation of ghosts that enables us to creatively explore the duration of things and consider the relationality of time. We examine this through two situated contexts, engaging with…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Climate, Time, Biodiversity
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Mati Keynes – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2024
This article explores how recent curricular reform in Australia has been responsive to a culture of redress. It argues that taken together, the 2008 National Apology to the Stolen Generations and the 2010 national curriculum reform marked a turning point, whereby settler colonial injustices have since been systematically included in the…
Descriptors: Land Settlement, Colonialism, Social Justice, Educational Change
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Dlouhy-Nelson, Jody; Hanson, Kelly – LEARNing Landscapes, 2023
This paper reveals the journey of two settler-researcher-educators supporting learning in preparation for Carey Newman's Witness Blanket Art Exhibit. Invited to create curriculum for students and educators of K-12 who would visit the exhibit, the authors describe co-curricular making as a living, re-generative, re-cursive experience. The learning…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Art, Exhibits
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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
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Lydia Wilkes – College Composition and Communication, 2024
Avowing settler status positions settler scholars to join in storying less harmful futures for the discipline. This paper describes the author's journey toward continually avowing white settlerness through the Northern Shoshoni word daiboo' in the fulsomeness of its meanings, which include but also go beyond "white person," to help enact…
Descriptors: Whites, Social Justice, Racism, Indigenous Populations
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Cory A. Buckband – Language Policy, 2025
This paper utilizes raciolinguistic genealogy (Flores, in International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2021:111-115, 2021) to explore an historical case study of Spanish Franciscan missionaries in Alta California during an early period of colonization spanning the seventeenth-nineteenth centuries. In the study, I apply a raciolinguistic lens…
Descriptors: Spanish, Race, Language Attitudes, Colonialism
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Zembylas, Michalinos – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2022
This essay builds on the notion of 'racialized affects' in conjunction with recent educational theorizing of Sylvia Wynter's work on 'the human' to consider how these insights might extend conceptualizations on the 'coloniality of the affects' in curriculum and pedagogy. Specifically, the analysis shows how bringing into conversation Wynter's…
Descriptors: Racism, Colonialism, Curriculum, Equal Education
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