SCNAT and its network are committed to a sustainable science and society. They support policy-making, administration and business with expert knowledge and actively participate in public discourse. They strengthen the exchange across scientific disciplines and promote early career academics.

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Pathways Forum: Whose sustainability? Unpacking decolonization in sustainability science

Time

15:00 - 17:00

Meeting place

online

Researchers, policymakers, and Indigenous and local communities alike are recognizing the significance of incorporating diverse and sometimes conflicting knowledge and value systems to effectively address sustainability challenges. What (un)learning is necessary to enhance the autonomy of Global South scientists? How do researchers engage and highlight different visions for the future that are currently excluded in dominant Western paradigms? Decolonizing research in practice is a nuanced and multifaceted endeavour that involves reexamining and restructuring research practices to challenge and undo the complex and ongoing impacts of colonization. This webinar explores decolonizing research in Sustainability Science and will interest researchers who wish to treat decolonization as a process more than a buzzword.

Whose Sustainability? - Unpacking decolonization in sustainability science

Speakers:
Lyla Mehta, University of Sussex; Bagele Chilisa, University of Botswana; Farhana Sultana, Syracuse University (tbc)

Categories

Languages: English