Between appropriation and assassination

Author:

Murrey Amber

Abstract

PurposeOriented to ongoing student and university momentums for decolonial futures, the purpose of this paper is to interrogate the role and status of mainstream international development curricula and pedagogies by critiquing two absences in the sub-discipline’s teaching formulae: appropriations and assassinations.Design/methodology/approachThe author draws from a decade of research on oil extraction in Central Africa, including ethnographic work with two communities in Cameroon along the Chad–Cameroon Oil Pipeline; four years of research (interview-based and unofficial or grey materials) on the 1983 August Revolution in Burkina Faso and assassination of Thomas Sankara; and five years of experience teaching international development in North America, Western Europe and North and Eastern Africa.FindingsThrough a critical synthesis of political and rhetorical practices that are often considered in isolation (i.e. political assassinations and corporate appropriation of Indigenous knowledges), the author makes the case for what the author calls pedagogical disobedience: an anticipatory decolonial development curricula and praxis that is attentive to the simultaneity of violence and misappropriation within colonial operations of power (i.e. “coloniality of power” or “coloniality”).Originality/valueThis paper contributes to debates within international development about the future of the discipline given its neo-colonial and colonial constitutions and functions with a grounded attention to how this opens up possibilities for teaching praxis and scholarship in action.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

General Social Sciences,Economics and Econometrics

Reference75 articles.

1. Bhabha, H.K. (Ed.) (1990), Nation and Narration, Routledge, London and New York, NY.

2. Bhambra, G.K., Gebrial, D. and Nisancioglu, K. (2018), “Introduction: decolonising the University?”, in Bhambra, G.K., Gebrial, D. and Nisancioglu, K. (Eds), Decolonising the University, Pluto Press, London, pp. 1-18.

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