This article engages with and aims to advance the debate about Decolonizing geography, examining its approach to knowledge and its implications for the discipline. Decolonizers draw heavily upon social constructivist and historically-rooted notions of knowledge which emphasize its embeddedness in power relations. While shedding light on the social and political conditions under which knowledge is produced is valuable, its context-dependent view of knowledge limits its scope to account for disciplinary knowledge. Taking a particularistic epistemology which conflates knowledge with experience is insufficient to explain the historical evolution of theoretical and disciplinary frameworks. Denying the potential for and even the desirability of c...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
This essay is a critique of modern/colonial knowledge production, with particular reference to devel...
This article engages with and aims to advance the debate about Decolonizing geography, examining its...
The theme for the chair’s plenaries at the 2017 Royal Geographical Society (RGS) with the Institute ...
This paper explores tensions that emerge from the injunction to make progress in geographical knowle...
Anglophone and North Atlantic geography is enmeshed institutionally, epistemically and racially in c...
This piece provides an overview of decolonising approaches for geographers unfamiliar with the field...
This chapter explores the recent debates about knowledge among sociologists in education, subsequent...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
While a clear rationale for the need to decolonise school geography curricula has been proposed, the...
Philosophy section,A decade of innovative Geography (Article 689).Epistemological discourses such as...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
This essay is a critique of modern/colonial knowledge production, with particular reference to devel...
This article engages with and aims to advance the debate about Decolonizing geography, examining its...
The theme for the chair’s plenaries at the 2017 Royal Geographical Society (RGS) with the Institute ...
This paper explores tensions that emerge from the injunction to make progress in geographical knowle...
Anglophone and North Atlantic geography is enmeshed institutionally, epistemically and racially in c...
This piece provides an overview of decolonising approaches for geographers unfamiliar with the field...
This chapter explores the recent debates about knowledge among sociologists in education, subsequent...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
While a clear rationale for the need to decolonise school geography curricula has been proposed, the...
Philosophy section,A decade of innovative Geography (Article 689).Epistemological discourses such as...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
This essay is a critique of modern/colonial knowledge production, with particular reference to devel...