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Toward a decolonial Africa-centering ecological and social psychology

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dc.contributor.author Suffla, Shahnaaz
dc.contributor.author Ratele, Kopano
dc.contributor.author Adams, Glenn
dc.contributor.author Reddy, Geetha
dc.contributor.author Malherbe, Nick
dc.date.accessioned 2024-01-23T14:12:01Z
dc.date.available 2024-01-23T14:12:01Z
dc.date.issued 2023
dc.identifier.citation Suffla, S., Ratele, K., Adams, G., Reddy, G., & Malherbe, N. (2023). Toward a decolonial Africa-centering ecological and social psychology. Current Research in Ecological and Social Psychology, 5, 100156. en
dc.identifier.other 10.1016/j.cresp.2023.100156
dc.identifier.other http://creativecommons.org/licenses/bync-nd/4.0/
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10500/30750
dc.description.abstract As collaborators on projects with epistemic foundations in the diverse everyday realities of different African settings, we respect and endorse the goal of the special issue (SI) to expand “psychological science to include the Middle East and Africa.” In this Short Communications article, we draw on a central insight of Africa-centering perspectives—namely, a healthy vigilance about the coloniality of knowledge in hegemonic whitestream science—to engage the goal of the SI via a critical reading of its call for papers around a contrast between imperialist and decolonial forms of inclusion. Although inclusion of research in African settings addresses issues of epistemic exclusion, imperialist forms of inclusion that assimilate African cases to whitestream science can reproduce forms of epistemic extractivism, epistemic imposition, and epistemological violence. In contrast, decolonial forms of inclusion draw on African epistemic resources to denaturalize accounts of the modern present that researchers represent, typically without reference to the coloniality that constitutes modernity, as something akin to natural facts. Rather than assimilate African cases to whitestream science, the goal of decolonial inclusion is an ecological and social psychology that takes African experience—and especially unflinching awareness of the coloniality of modernity—as an epistemic foundation for a global science en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Elsevier B.V en
dc.subject african studies en
dc.subject decolonial en
dc.subject epistemic violence en
dc.subject inclusion en
dc.title Toward a decolonial Africa-centering ecological and social psychology en
dc.type Article en
dc.description.department Institute for Social and Health Studies (ISHS) en


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