The violence of curriculum: Dismantling systemic racism, colonisation and indigenous erasure within medical education

Author:

Razack Saleem1ORCID,Richardson Lisa23ORCID,Pillay Suntosh R.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Critical Care, Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia; Centre for Health Education Scholarship, BC Children's Hospital Vancouver British Columbia Canada

2. Temerty School of Medicine University of Toronto Toronto Canada

3. Department of Medicine, Temerty School of Medicine University of Toronto Toronto Canada

4. Department of Clinical Medicine, College of Health Sciences University of KwaZulu‐Natal Durban South Africa

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundEpistemic violence is enacted in medical curricula in mundane ways all the time, negatively impacting learners, teachers and patients. In this article, we address three forms of such violence: White supremacy, indigenous erasure and heteronormativity.MethodsIn this article, we examine the knowledge systems of medicine as a global phenomenon, impacted by Western and European ideologies of race and colonisation, both produced by them, helping to reproduce them through authoritative and hegemonic ideologies. We seek not only to problematise but also to propose alternative teaching approaches rooted in the Global South and in Indigenous ways of knowing. Taking inspiration from Paulo Freire, we advocate for the development of critical consciousness through the integration of critical pedagogies of love, emancipation and shared humanity. Drawing on Irihapeti Ramsden, we advocate for cultural safety, which emphasises power relations and historical trauma in the clinical encounter and calls for a rights‐based approach in medical education. Deliberately holding space for our own vulnerabilities and that of our students requires what Megan Boler calls a pedagogy of discomfort.Conclusions and SignificanceOur perspectives converge on the importance of critical consciousness development for culturally safe practice in medical education, acknowledging the need to emphasise a curriculum of shared humanity, introducing the concept of Ubuntu from Southern Africa. Ubuntu can be encapsulated in the phrase ‘I am because we are’, and it promotes a collective approach to medical education in which there is active solidarity between the profession and the diverse populations which it serves.

Publisher

Wiley

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