Integrating Indigenous Knowledge in South African Geography Education Curricula for Social Justice and Decolonization

Author:

Tarisayi Kudzayi Savious1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Curriculum Studies, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa

Abstract

This paper analyzes the integration of indigenous knowledge into South African geography education as an intersection of social justice and decolonial imperatives. Historically, colonial education systems have marginalized indigenous epistemologies by privileging Western knowledge as universally superior. Integrating indigenous perspectives into curricula can counter this legacy by promoting cognitive justice and unsettling Eurocentric dominance. However, meaningful integration requires moving beyond superficial additions of indigenous elements within unchanged Western-centric curricula as this risks appropriating indigenous knowledge in disempowering ways. The paper argued that ethical integration necessitates recentring indigenous knowledge systems in their own right alongside Western frameworks to enact pluralistic, horizontal cognitive frameworks. A qualitative literature analysis identified key themes around recognizing indigenous epistemologies, dismantling enduring hierarchies, and developing responsible community-centred integration processes. While systemic constraints pose barriers, integrating indigenous perspectives into geography education holds the transformative potential to advance both social justice inclusion aims and decolonial decentralization agendas. This convergence provides opportunities to develop anti-oppressive curricula that empower marginalized knowledge and ontologies. However, realization requires extensive efforts to sustain reflexivity and enable indigenous self-determination over knowledge. Ultimately, the paper underscored that indigenous knowledge integration must move beyond tokenism towards fundamentally transforming education systems through ethical, empowering processes grounded in partnerships with indigenous communities. This is vital for nurturing students able to navigate the world through plural epistemologies and enacting both social justice and decolonial futures. Keywords: Indigenous Knowledge, Decoloniality, Social justice, Geography Education

Publisher

Noyam Publishers

Reference38 articles.

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2. Battiste, Marie. “Decolonizing Education: Nourishing the Learning Spirit.” Alberta Journal of Educational Research 60, no. 3 (2014): 615–18.

3. ———. “Indigenous Knowledge and Pedagogy in First Nations Education: A Literature Review with Recommendations,” 2002.

4. Bhabha, Homi K. The Location of Culture. routledge, 2012.

5. Bhambra, Gurminder K. Connected Sociologies. Bloomsbury Academic, 2014.

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