Towards a decolonial developmental science: Adolescent development in the Majority World taking center stage

Author:

Abubakar Amina1,Brandelli Costa Angelo2ORCID,Cui Lixian3ORCID,Koller Silvia H.45,Nwafor Chidozie Edwin6ORCID,Raval Vaishali V.7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Aga Khan University Nairobi Kenya

2. Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul Porto Alegre Brazil

3. NYU Shanghai Shanghai China

4. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande Porto Alegre Brazil

5. North West University Potchefstroom South Africa

6. Nnamdi Azikiwe University Awka Nigeria

7. Miami University Oxford Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractWhile aspiring to be a diverse and global science, developmental science continues to be dominated by EuroAmerican epistemologies, researchers, and communities in its published scholarship. Adolescents in communities across Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America comprise 85% of the world's adolescent population, and yet their experiences and perspectives are marginalized in our science. Adolescents in the Majority World live in highly diverse social, cultural, political, economic, educational and healthcare contexts that contribute to their development, and we have much to learn from their experiences. This article situates the marginalization of the global majority within coloniality embedded in developmental science. The article describes the impetus for this special issue Towards a decolonial developmental science and the process of putting it together, along with providing an overview of the 18 articles in this collection that push us towards decoloniality. The special issue serves as a call to transform developmental science to be decolonial by empowering adolescent development in Majority World communities to take center stage. Adolescent development research from Majority World communities has the potential to challenge the knowledge base generated from Minority World samples, contributing to a science that is comprehensive, inclusive, and can inform prevention and intervention efforts to support the well‐being of adolescents globally.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference71 articles.

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