Response to: “Looking back to launch forward: a self-reflexive approach to decolonising science education and communication in Africa”. Decoloniality opens up new epistemic vistas for science communication

IF 2 Q2 COMMUNICATION
S. Raman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Decolonial perspectives open up epistemic and practical insights for science communication. Following critiques of a deficit-model framing of the field, science communication has been redefined as an inclusive cultural space of meaning-making around science. From a decolonial lens, however, a cultural perspective necessitates a fundamental reckoning with the historical and contemporary politics of knowledge claims, including the erasure and devaluation of entire knowledge-systems in the process of Westernization. In recognizing and learning from these histories, science communication can learn from parallel developments within the sciences. It can also learn from contributions made by decolonial scholars to the global challenge of navigating sustainable futures. This piece briefly discusses one such example, drawing from scholarship on the ontological cosmovision of Ubuntu and its relevance to climate change dilemmas today.
对“回顾向前发射:非洲非殖民化科学教育和传播的自我反思方法”的回应。非殖民化为科学传播开辟了新的认知前景
非殖民视角为科学传播开辟了认识论和实践见解。在对该领域的缺陷模型框架提出批评之后,科学传播被重新定义为围绕科学进行意义创造的包容性文化空间。然而,从非殖民化的角度来看,文化的视角需要对知识主张的历史和当代政治进行基本的清算,包括在西方化过程中对整个知识体系的抹除和贬值。在认识和学习这些历史的过程中,科学传播可以从科学内部的平行发展中学习。它还可以借鉴非殖民学者为应对可持续未来的全球挑战所做的贡献。这篇文章简要地讨论了这样一个例子,从Ubuntu的本体论宇宙观及其与当今气候变化困境的相关性的学术研究中得出结论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
22.20%
发文量
80
审稿时长
5 weeks
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