Decolonising quantitative research methods pedagogy: Teaching contemporary politics to challenge hierarchies from data

Author:

Zwiener-Collins Nadine1ORCID,Jafri Juvaria2ORCID,Saini Rima3,Poulter Tabitha4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Salzburg, Austria

2. University of Cambridge, UK

3. Middlesex University, UK

4. City, University of London, UK

Abstract

Decolonisation of the curriculum in higher education is a radical, transformative process of change that interrogates the enduring Eurocentric and racist narratives surrounding the production of academic ‘knowledge’. Our key argument is that it is essential for students of politics to understand the authorities and hierarchies exerted through quantitative data. In this article, we show that (1) quantitative methods and data literacy can be an explicit tool in the endeavour to challenge structures of oppression, and (2) there is a need to apply decolonial principles to the teaching of quantitative methods, prioritising the historical contextualisation and anti-racist critique of the ways in which statistics amplify existing micro and macro power relations. To explain how this can be done, we begin with a commentary on the ‘state of decolonisation’ in higher education, its relevance to the subdisciplines of politics, and its application to quantitative teaching in the United Kingdom. We then suggest some guiding principles for a decolonial approach to quantitative methods teaching and present substantive examples from political sociology, international political economy, and international development. These suggestions and examples show how a decolonial lens advances critical and emancipatory thinking in undergraduate students of politics when it is used with quantitative methods.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Political Science and International Relations

Cited by 7 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Confronting the Legacy of Eugenics and Ableism: Towards Anti-Ableist Bioscience Education;CBE—Life Sciences Education;2024-09

2. Moving beyond delinking, decoloniality and the pluriverse: reflections on the “decolonizing international business” debate;Critical Perspectives on International Business;2023-12-19

3. Embracing Diversity and Inclusion: A Decolonial Approach to Urban Computing;2023 20th ACS/IEEE International Conference on Computer Systems and Applications (AICCSA);2023-12-04

4. Decolonising economics and politics curricula in UK universities;Studies in Higher Education;2023-10-16

5. Measuring the Teaching of Global Literacies;Critical Perspectives on Global Literacies;2023-03-09

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