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Table of Contents Articles Challenges of Educational TABLE OF CONTENTS ARTICLES CHALLENGES OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH FROM A DECOLONIAL PERSPECTIVE João Colares da Mota Neto and Adriane Raquel Santana de Lima EXPERIENCES OF VULNERABILITY IN POVERTY EDUCATION: DEVELOPING REFLEXIVE ETHICAL PRAXIS Tim Blackman “SECOND-CHANCE EDUCATION: RE-DEFINING YOUTH DEVELOPMENT IN GRENADA Laura Perez Gonzalez REVIEWS THEATRE FOR THE MOMENT Kirstin Sonne IN MEMORIAM PHYLLIS COARD Anne Hickling Hudson OLIVER FRIGGIERI Adrian Grima EDWARD KAMAU BRATHWAITE Anne Collet This is an international journal published by the Faculty of Education, University of Malta Postcolonial Directions in Education Focus and Scope Postcolonial Directions in Education is a peer reviewed open access journal produced twice a year. It is a scholarly journal intended to foster further understanding, advancement and reshaping of the field of postcolonial education. We welcome articles that contribute to advancing the field. As indicated in the Editorial for the inaugural issue, the purview of this journal is broad enough to encompass a variety of disciplinary approaches, including but not confined to the following: sociological, anthropological, historical and social psychological approaches. The areas embraced include anti- racist education, decolonizing education, critical multiculturalism, critical racism theory, direct colonial experiences in education and their legacies for present day educational structures and practice, educational experiences reflecting the culture and ‘imagination’ of empire, the impact of neoliberalism/globalisation/structural adjustment programmes on education, colonial curricula and subaltern alternatives, education and liberation movements, challenging hegemonic languages, the promotion of local literacies and linguistic diversity, neo-colonial education and identity construction, colonialism and the construction of patriarchy, canon and canonicity, Indigenous knowledges, supranational bodies and their educational frameworks, north-south and east-west relations in education, the politics of representation, unlearning colonial stereotypes, internal colonialism and education, cultural hybridity and learning in postcolonial contexts, education and the politics of dislocation, biographies / autobiographies reflecting the above themes, deconstruction of colonial narratives of civilization within educational contexts. Once again, the field cannot be exhausted. Peer Review Process Papers submitted to Postcolonial Directions in Education are examined by at least two reviewers for originality and timeliness in the context of related research. Reviews generally are completed in 30-60 days, with publication in the next available issue. Open Access Policy This journal provides immediate open access to its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge. ISSN: 2304-5388 This is an international journal published by the Faculty of Education, University of Malta Editors Anne Hickling Hudson, Queensland University of Technology Peter Mayo, University of Malta Milosh Raykov, University of Malta Editorial Board Carmel Borg, University of Malta George Sefa Dei, OISE/University of Toronto Gloria Lauri Lucente, University of Malta Daniel Schugurensky, Arizona State University Saviour Zammit, University of Malta Editorial Advisory Board Ali A Abdi, University of British Columbia Nahla Abdo, Carleton University Vanessa Andreotti, University of British Columbia Nina Asher, Teachers’ College, Columbia University Asoke Bhattacharya, Jadavpur University, Calcutta Rosanna Cima, Università degli Studi di Verona Jim Cummins, OISE/University of Toronto Antonia Darder, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles. Iain Michael Chambers, Università degli Studi Orientale, Naples Stephanie (Daza) Curley, Manchester Metropolitan University Mohammed Ezroura, Université Mohammed V, Rabat Christine N. Fox, University of Wollongong Ratna Ghosh, McGill University, Montreal Henry Giroux, McMaster University Catherine A. Odora Hoppers, University of South Africa Didacus Jules, Organization of Eastern Caribbean States Dip Kapoor, University of Alberta Sunethra Karunaratne, University of Peradeniya Donaldo Macedo, University of Massachusetts, Boston Ibrahim A. Makkawi, Birzeit University André Elias Mazawi, University of British Columbia Peter McLaren, Chapman University, California Lynn Mario T. Menezes De Souza, University of São Paulo Nur Masalha, SOAS, University of London Mauro Pala, Università di Cagliari Helen Phtiaka, University of Cyprus Vandana Shiva, Navdanya/ Research Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology Concetta Sirna, Università degli Studi, Messina Linda Tuhiwai Smith, University of Waikato Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Columbia University Shirley R. Steinberg, University of Calgary Ngugi Wa Thiong ‘O, University of California, Irvine Leon Paul Tikly, University of Bristol Rinaldo Wayne Walcott, OISE/University of Toronto John Willinsky, Stanford University, California Handel Wright, University of British Columbia Joseph Zanoni, University of Illinois at Chicago Davide Zoletto, Università degli Studi di Udine POSTCOLONIAL DIRECTIONS IN EDUCATION Volume 9 Issue 2, 2020 TABLE OF CONTENTS ARTICLES 1. CHALLENGES OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH FROM A DECOLONIAL PERSPECTIVE João Colares da Mota Neto and 154-197 Adriane Raquel Santana de Lima 2. EXPERIENCES OF VULNERABILITY IN POVERTY EDUCATION: DEVELOPING REFLEXIVE ETHICAL PRAXIS Tim Blackman 198-225 3. “SECOND-CHANCE” EDUCATION: RE-DEFINING YOUTH DEVELOPMENT IN GRENADA Laura Perez Gonzalez 226-271 REVIEWS 4. THEATRE FOR THE MOMENT Kirstin Sonne 272-279 IN MEMORIAM 5. PHYLLIS COARD Anne Hickling Hudson 280-294 6. OLIVER FRIGGIERI Adrian Grima 295-298 7. EDWARD KAMAU BRATHWAITE Anne Collet 299-312 CHALLENGES OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH FROM A DECOLONIAL PERSPECTIVE João Colares da Mota Neto Universidade do Estado do Pará. Adriane Raquel Santana de Lima Universidade Federal do Pará. ABSTRACT: In this article, we develop a critical reflection on the challenges of educational research from a decolonial perspective. We argue at the outset that the decolonial epistemological turn present in the growing set of Latin American, Brazilian, and Amazonian academic production in the field of education needs to be accompanied by a methodological turn, which possesses an inventive and transgressive capacity in the processes of knowledge production. We use as theoretical sources contributions of decolonial thinking, black feminist epistemologies, popular education, participatory action-research, and other counter- hegemonic thinking paradigms. We analyze, in particular, the need to overcome the pedagogical coloniality and eurocentrism present in universities and in traditional processes of knowledge production; the construction of a participatory perspective and a political-transformative commitment to the social and educational realities investigated; the need to research education in dialogue with the experiences lived by subalternized subjects – their memories, ancestral elements, and wisdoms. Among the challenges pointed out, we also propose the incorporation of sensitivity and ethical commitment in the investigations, the assumption of corporeality in the processes of knowledge production, the construction of sensitive and decolonial writing and the adoption of intersectionality as a methodological perspective of decolonial research. Postcolonial Directions in Education, Vol. 9 No 2 154 RESUMO: Neste artigo, desenvolvemos uma reflexão crítica sobre os desafios da pesquisa em educação em perspectiva decolonial. Parte do argumento de que o giro epistemológico decolonial presente em conjunto crescente da produção acadêmica latino-americana, brasileira e amazônica no campo da educação precisa estar acompanhado de um giro metodológico, que possupõe uma capacidade inventiva e transgressora nos processos de produção do conhecimento. Utilizamos como fontes teóricas aportes do pensamento decolonial, das epistemologias feministas negras, da educação popular, da investigação-ação participativa e outros paradigmas de pensamento contra-hegemônicos. Analisamos, em particular, a necessidade de superação da colonialidade pedagógica e do eurocentirsmo presentes nas universidades e nos processos tradicionais de produção do conhecimento; a construção de uma perspectiva participativa e um compromisso político-transformador em face das realidades sociais e educacionais investigadas; a necessidade de se pesquisar a educação em diálogo com as experiências vividas por sujeitos subalternizados, suas memórias, ancestralidades e sabedorias. Dentre os desafios apontados, também se propõe a incorporação da sensibilidade e o compromisso ético nas investigações, a assunção da corporeidade nos processos de produção do conhecimento, a construção de uma escrita sensível e decolonial e a adoção da interseccionalidade como perspeciva metodológica das pesquisas decoloniais. Keywords: Research in Education. Decoloniality. Intellectual colonialism. Introduction The academic production known as “decolonial” (despite its genealogy being linked to the epistemic practices of denouncing colonialism and coloniality both present in the colonized populations’ resistance movements since the beginning of the Conquest) begins to self-refer as this term at the late 1990s and early 2000s by Latin American intellectuals linked to the “Latin American modernity/coloniality research Postcolonial Directions in Education, Vol. 9 No 2 155 program” (Escobar, 2003). This program
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