2nd Edition

Decolonizing Educational Research From Ownership to Answerability

By Leigh Patel Copyright 2027
210 Pages
by Routledge

210 Pages
by Routledge

Decolonizing Educational Research  examines 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, this 10th Anniversary Edition continues to investigate the longstanding traditions of... Read more

Introduction

1. Educational Research as a Site of Coloniality

Introduction: A Note to those Fighting for Sovereign Futures with One Hand, and Cooking Dinner for Dear Ones in the Other

Amanda R. Tachine

First Edition Chapter 1: Educational Research as a Site of Coloniality

Outro: Welcome to the Decolonizing Gathering

Sean Hernández Adkins

2. [Dys]Functionality: Educational Research and Settler Colonialism

Introduction: Researching for Good and Ill

Leilani Sabzalian

First Edition Chapter 2: [Dys]Functionality: Educational Research and Settler Colonialism

3. Research as Relational

Introduction: The Weight We Carry: A Personal Reckoning with Methodological Apertures

Heather McCambly

First Edition Chapter 3: Research as Relational

4. Answerability

Introduction: Answerability and Abolition

Jude Paul Dizon

First Edition Chapter 4: Answerability

Outro: Tending to Grief and Hauntings: Reflections on Research as Relational Praxis

Z Nicolazzo and irene h yoon

5. Beyond Social Justice

Introduction: In conversation with Jamila Lyiscott

Jamila Lyiscott

First Edition Chapter 5: Beyond Social Justice

Outro: The Mortality of Learning: Knowledge as Impermanent

briana karina namibia rodríguez

Afterword: The Embodied Resistance to Pause: When My Body Rejected Stillness

Susana M. Muñoz

Biography

Leigh Patel is a Professor of Educational Foundations, Organizations, and Policy at the University of Pittsburgh, USA.

"The book's clarity is an elegant accomplishment. It is a humane breathing of life into what answerability can be, and it is pedagogically powerful, particularly as new generations of scholars deeply attuned and aware of some of the contingencies we must be answerable to, are ready and willing – and perhaps already reaching for, rehearsing or practicing answerability."

From the Foreword by Megan Bang, Professor of Learning Sciences and Director of the Center for Native American and Indigenous Research, Northwestern University, USA

"We welcome this tenth anniversary edition of Decolonizing Educational Research. Patel’s original argument is perhaps more compelling in light of current attacks on research addressing issues of cultural diversity and equity.The fundamental argument that research in education is limited in its explanatory power when as a field we do not recognize and acknowledge the ways that ontological belief systems rooted in colonial histories blind and restrict our abilities to wrestle with what are important ethical commitments. Education across all levels should address ethical commitments to do good, just as the medical field has an oath to do no harm. Patel’s comprehensive and compelling argument is critically needed at this time of contestation to both inform and inspire re-organization and re-commitments to broaden our ontologies and in so doing enable education as a field to robustly meet the needs of this and future generations."

Carol LeeProfessor Emeritus of Education, Northwestern University, USA

"When it feels like the wrong parts of our worlds are crumbling and when we feel alone in the work that so many of us are trying to do; when we are straining against the silencing, sometimes it is a book that can be a community. A book can be a balm. This new edition of Decolonizing Educational Research by Dr. Leigh Patel is a remembrance of what can be protected, what we can let go, and the need for imagining beyond what feels immediately practical and possible. 

Eve TuckProfessor of Indigenous Studies, New York University, USA

"The first edition of this book is a masterpiece. This second, expanded, edition brings a powerful set of additional voices to the table. In so doing, Dr. Patel opens up possibilities, attends to the stewardship necessary for pushing against the colonial nature of research, and creates opportunities for abundance. The abundance is rooted in the collective voices attending to, expanding, and imagining futures that are enhanced and open. I’m grateful for this book."

Bryan McKinley Jones BrayboyProfessor of Education and Social Policy, Northwestern University, USA

"What can research offer as the world burns, again? Tackling this question, this reader gathers radical, decolonial methods shaped by grief and love, and expertly holds the tension of both/and: How do we try to unmake violent systems and imagine new ones while trying to keep ourselves more than simply alive. These chapters ask how we might do research as praxis. What are our collective experiments that try to unpick the world as it is, while redistributing resources, building community, and choosing a freedom that leaves no-one behind. Chapters remind us that research will not save us, but it can help us remember how to fight, offer us new tools to support each other, and build our muscles to imagine something different, something better."

Erica MeinersAssistant Professor of Education and Women's Studies, Northeastern Illinois University, USA