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The erasures of racism in education and international development: re-reading the ‘global learning crisis’

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Tikly, L 
Walker, S 

Abstract

Despite pervasive forms of racism on a global scale, the field of education and international development continues to fail to substantively engage with the production and effects of racial domination across its domains of research, policy and practice. Considerations of racism remain silent, or indeed, are erased, within teaching and research, often in favour of colour-blind and technocratic approaches to ‘development’. This not only ignores the sector’s historical links to systems of racial domination, but also the current ways in which the field is implicated in producing unequal outcomes along racial lines. The authors present a re-reading of the ‘global learning crisis’–as the dominant discourse of contemporary educational development–to demonstrate how the framing of the ‘crisis’ and the responses it engenders and legitimises operate as a ‘racial project’. The paper offers theoretical and methodological resources with which to interrogate the field’s entanglements in systems of racial domination and challenge its erasures of racism.

Description

Keywords

Racism, colonialism, global development, sustainable development goals

Journal Title

Compare: a journal of comparative and international education

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0305-7925
1469-3623

Volume Title

50

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Rights

All rights reserved