Theorists working within the Frankfurt School tradition of critical theory have not been immune to calls to “decolonize” that have been circulating in and beyond the academic world. This article asks what it means to seek to decolonize a tradition of thought that has never explicitly acknowledged colonial histories. What is needed, instead, this article suggests, is consideration of the very implications of the “colonial modern”—that is, an acknowledgement of the colonial constitution of modernity—for Frankfurt School critical theory's idea of historical progress. The issue is more extensive than simply acknowledging the substantive neglect of colonialism within the tradition; rather, this article suggests that its categories of critique an...
Any radical re-imagining of qualitative research (especially in comparative education) requires a de...
The authors employ a systems perspective to investigate how coloniality is manifested in the current...
This paper hosts the first meaningful dialogue between two important epistemic movements for crimino...
In The End of Progress: Decolonizing the Normative Foundations of Critical Theory, Amy Allen challen...
This article considers the critical theory of the Frankfurt School in the context of decolonisation ...
Since 2016, I have been an active member of the Decolonising SOAS WG and in the last two years, I ha...
Since 2016, I have been an active member of the Decolonising SOAS WG and in the last two years, I ha...
Since 2016, I have been an active member of the Decolonising SOAS WG and in the last two years, I ha...
The role of colonialism in the development of modern society is by now well acknowledged. Gurminder ...
In this paper I shall argue that radical epistemic delinking has a key role in liberation from the C...
This essay explores the extent to which comparative philosophy can assist decolonial struggle. In or...
In this article, I expose how the modernity/coloniality research programme thematises the concepts o...
In celebration of the fortieth anniversary of CODESRIA, an institution from the Global South devoted...
Southern criminology has been recognized as a leading theoretical development for attempting to over...
Any radical re-imagining of qualitative research (especially in comparative education) requires a de...
Any radical re-imagining of qualitative research (especially in comparative education) requires a de...
The authors employ a systems perspective to investigate how coloniality is manifested in the current...
This paper hosts the first meaningful dialogue between two important epistemic movements for crimino...
In The End of Progress: Decolonizing the Normative Foundations of Critical Theory, Amy Allen challen...
This article considers the critical theory of the Frankfurt School in the context of decolonisation ...
Since 2016, I have been an active member of the Decolonising SOAS WG and in the last two years, I ha...
Since 2016, I have been an active member of the Decolonising SOAS WG and in the last two years, I ha...
Since 2016, I have been an active member of the Decolonising SOAS WG and in the last two years, I ha...
The role of colonialism in the development of modern society is by now well acknowledged. Gurminder ...
In this paper I shall argue that radical epistemic delinking has a key role in liberation from the C...
This essay explores the extent to which comparative philosophy can assist decolonial struggle. In or...
In this article, I expose how the modernity/coloniality research programme thematises the concepts o...
In celebration of the fortieth anniversary of CODESRIA, an institution from the Global South devoted...
Southern criminology has been recognized as a leading theoretical development for attempting to over...
Any radical re-imagining of qualitative research (especially in comparative education) requires a de...
Any radical re-imagining of qualitative research (especially in comparative education) requires a de...
The authors employ a systems perspective to investigate how coloniality is manifested in the current...
This paper hosts the first meaningful dialogue between two important epistemic movements for crimino...