For this Currents section, we have called upon anthropologists across the global South and North in the attempt to mainstream the long overdue issue of decolonizing ethnographies. On the one hand, movements for ethnic/racial equality across the world have made this task more and more pressing. On the other, reactionary forces have tried to suppress such moves alongside critical race theorization—an integral part of decolonizing—as unnecessary and even racist. Based in Brazil, Kenya, India, Singapore, the United Kingdom, and the United States, contributors consider the decolonizing of ethnographies in terms of three overlapping areas: (i) ontologies and epistemologies that redress metanarratives and the history of ethnoracial occlusions and ...
This article analyses important trends in contemporary decolonial approaches in the field of interna...
This article addresses some of the discussions taking place at the Social Sciences program of the Af...
Decolonizing approaches in archaeology emerged as a means to counter the dominance of colonial ideol...
International audienceEthnobiology, like many fields, was shaped by early Western imperial efforts t...
In 1999, the seminal work of Linda Tuhiwai Smith brought to light the numerous ways in which colonia...
Calls to “decolonize” the social sciences have reverberated in academia since at least the 1950s. An...
The context of this contribution to the PAWBL symposium is an ethnographically-oriented research and...
Anthropological practice has been dominated by the so-called "great" traditions (Anglo-American, Fre...
One central demand is that anthropology needs more collaborative authorship and symmetric engagement...
Today ethnography is extremely fragmented. What once was its core – the “field” – has now progressiv...
There have been several movements focused on decolonizing anthropology since the 1960s (Pels 2021). ...
Through the notions of distance, double critique, and colonial difference, this essay suggests a dec...
This paper demonstrates realist ethnographic paradigms and practices of engaging an extended period...
This is the first webinar in a six-part series from NCRM called Decolonial Research Methods: Resisti...
This chapter focuses on the indigenous identity of an Amerindian group, the Embera, and their intere...
This article analyses important trends in contemporary decolonial approaches in the field of interna...
This article addresses some of the discussions taking place at the Social Sciences program of the Af...
Decolonizing approaches in archaeology emerged as a means to counter the dominance of colonial ideol...
International audienceEthnobiology, like many fields, was shaped by early Western imperial efforts t...
In 1999, the seminal work of Linda Tuhiwai Smith brought to light the numerous ways in which colonia...
Calls to “decolonize” the social sciences have reverberated in academia since at least the 1950s. An...
The context of this contribution to the PAWBL symposium is an ethnographically-oriented research and...
Anthropological practice has been dominated by the so-called "great" traditions (Anglo-American, Fre...
One central demand is that anthropology needs more collaborative authorship and symmetric engagement...
Today ethnography is extremely fragmented. What once was its core – the “field” – has now progressiv...
There have been several movements focused on decolonizing anthropology since the 1960s (Pels 2021). ...
Through the notions of distance, double critique, and colonial difference, this essay suggests a dec...
This paper demonstrates realist ethnographic paradigms and practices of engaging an extended period...
This is the first webinar in a six-part series from NCRM called Decolonial Research Methods: Resisti...
This chapter focuses on the indigenous identity of an Amerindian group, the Embera, and their intere...
This article analyses important trends in contemporary decolonial approaches in the field of interna...
This article addresses some of the discussions taking place at the Social Sciences program of the Af...
Decolonizing approaches in archaeology emerged as a means to counter the dominance of colonial ideol...