Decolonizing Educational Researchexamines the ways through which coloniality manifests in contexts of knowledge and meaning making, specifically within educational research and formal schooling. Purposefully situated beyond popular deconstructionist theory and anthropocentric perspectives, the book investigates the longstanding traditions of oppression, racism, and white supremacy that are systemically reseated and reinforced by learning and social interaction. Through these meaningful explorations into the unfixed and often interrupted narratives of culture, history, place, and identity, a bold, timely, and hopeful vision emerges to conceive of how research in secondary and higher education institutions might break free of colonial genealogies and their widespread complicities.
Acknowledgements
Foreword by Eve Tuck
Introduction
Chapter One: Educational Research as a Site of Coloniality
Chapter Two: [Dys]Functionality: Educational Research and Settler Colonialism
Chapter Three: Research as Relational
Chapter Four: Answerability
Chapter Five: Beyond Social Justice
Index
Decolonizing Educational Research brilliantly interrogates the prevalent positivistic research framework. In an accessible, poetic, yet rigorous language, Leigh Patel courageously challenges even well-intentioned researchers and powerfully analyzes how educational research, by and large, produces
careerist scholarship that remains linked to
colonial scholarship. All educators and social scientists who take research seriously must read this book.
--Donaldo Macedo, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of Liberal Arts, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA
An important crossroads for critical educational research . . . Patel has done something quite generous and generative for educational research: she haslóS