解除盟友关系,忘记和学习非殖民化团结

IF 1.2 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
J. Kluttz, Judith Walker, Pierre Walter
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引用次数: 30

摘要

摘要社会运动是跨越差异进行集体学习的教学空间。不同的世界观、兴趣和身份、历史遗产和权力关系使为共同事业结盟和团结的概念复杂化。在这篇文章中,我们利用社会运动和变革性学习来反思我们作为白人定居者殖民者在Standing Rock与美国输油管道的斗争中研究盟友关系的学习和遗忘经历。我们的文本也受到了我们自己作为当地土著人领导的保护海洋和土地免受特鲁多-金德-摩根输油管道影响的运动活动家的经历的影响。首先我们介绍我们自己,我们的研究项目,背景和论点。然后,我们在社会运动和变革性学习学术中定位我们的工作,批判盟友关系和团结的概念。我们主张摒弃以我们特定的白人殖民知识、领导力、特权、权力和机构为中心的殖民做法和心态,并学习非殖民化团结。为了说明这一过程,我们呈现了三个个人小插曲,讲述了我们自己“忘记自己”的开始,以及非殖民化团结的学习。在文章的最后,我们讨论了我们认为如何在社会运动中最好地学习非殖民化团结。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Unsettling allyship, unlearning and learning towards decolonising solidarity
Abstract Social movements are pedagogical spaces for collective learning across difference. Divergent worldviews, interest and identity, historical legacies and relations of power complicate notions of allyship and solidarity for common cause. In this article, we draw on social movement and transformative learning to reflect on our experiences of learning and unlearning as white settler-colonialists researching allyship in the Standing Rock struggle against an oil pipeline in the United States. Our text is also shaped by our own experience as activists within a local Indigenous-led movement to protect ocean and land from the Trudeau–Kinder Morgan oil pipeline. First we introduce ourselves, our research project, context and argument. We then position our work within social movement and transformative learning scholarship, critique notions of allyship and then solidarity. We argue for the unlearning of colonial practices and mindsets which centre our particular white colonial knowledge, leadership, privilege, power and bodies and learning towards decolonising solidarity. To illustrate this process, we present three personal vignettes that speak about the start of our own 'unlearning of ourselves', and learning of decolonising solidarity. We conclude the article with a discussion of how best we believe learning towards decolonising solidarity might proceed in social movements.
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来源期刊
Studies in the Education of Adults-NIACE
Studies in the Education of Adults-NIACE EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
17.60%
发文量
28
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