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A Pathway Towards Feminist Global Collaboration
In the second instalment of our five-episode series on feminist development policy we discuss four aspects of Knowledge as Power that we believe need to be addressed in order to achieve more Feminist Global Collaboration: the different knowledge paradigms we value, the knowledge we exclude by prioritizing some over others, the phenomenon of knowledge extraction and reflecting on the knowledge held by who is actually doing development, and to what end.
A podcast with:
This series was initiated by an emerging network of practitioners aiming to re-think development policy from a feminist perspective; FAIR SHARE of Women Leaders, a feminist non-profit initiative to advance gender equity in the in civil society sector; and the Heinrich Böll Foundation.
Audio production by Grettch.
Download the transcript here.
Shownotes:
2. Aram Ziai. Development Discourse and Global History, From colonialism to the sustainable development goals: www.taylorfrancis.com/books/oa-
3. Claudia Horn and Isadora Cardoso. COP26 Was a Flop, but the Climate Justice Movement Is Still Growing:
jacobin.com/2021/11/cop26-clima…ement-latin-america
4. www.decolonizedevelopment.org
5. Grada Kilomba. Plantation Memories, Epsiodes of Everday Racism.
6. Keya Khandaker and Lata Narayanaswamy. The unbearable whiteness of international development:
www.globalstudies.ugent.be/the-unbeara…elopment/2/
7. Miriam Lang, Lyda Fernando, Nick Buxton. Beyond Development: Alternative Visions from Latin America:
www.tni.org/files/download/beyo…opment_complete.pdf
8. Professor Sylvia Tamale. Re-Routing Knowledge Production in Africa: In Search of Our Roots.
9. Tim Kornprobst et al. Postcolonialism & Post-Development: Practical Perspectives for Development Cooperation:
www.researchgate.net/publication/34…nt_Cooperation
10. White Dominance and Inclusion: Spectrums of Organizational Characteristics. This work is adapted largely from the works of Tema Okun, Kenneth Jones, and Partners for Collaborative Change found at Changeelemental.org:
changeelemental.org/resources/kicki…premacy-culture
By Heinrich-Böll-StiftungA Pathway Towards Feminist Global Collaboration
In the second instalment of our five-episode series on feminist development policy we discuss four aspects of Knowledge as Power that we believe need to be addressed in order to achieve more Feminist Global Collaboration: the different knowledge paradigms we value, the knowledge we exclude by prioritizing some over others, the phenomenon of knowledge extraction and reflecting on the knowledge held by who is actually doing development, and to what end.
A podcast with:
This series was initiated by an emerging network of practitioners aiming to re-think development policy from a feminist perspective; FAIR SHARE of Women Leaders, a feminist non-profit initiative to advance gender equity in the in civil society sector; and the Heinrich Böll Foundation.
Audio production by Grettch.
Download the transcript here.
Shownotes:
2. Aram Ziai. Development Discourse and Global History, From colonialism to the sustainable development goals: www.taylorfrancis.com/books/oa-
3. Claudia Horn and Isadora Cardoso. COP26 Was a Flop, but the Climate Justice Movement Is Still Growing:
jacobin.com/2021/11/cop26-clima…ement-latin-america
4. www.decolonizedevelopment.org
5. Grada Kilomba. Plantation Memories, Epsiodes of Everday Racism.
6. Keya Khandaker and Lata Narayanaswamy. The unbearable whiteness of international development:
www.globalstudies.ugent.be/the-unbeara…elopment/2/
7. Miriam Lang, Lyda Fernando, Nick Buxton. Beyond Development: Alternative Visions from Latin America:
www.tni.org/files/download/beyo…opment_complete.pdf
8. Professor Sylvia Tamale. Re-Routing Knowledge Production in Africa: In Search of Our Roots.
9. Tim Kornprobst et al. Postcolonialism & Post-Development: Practical Perspectives for Development Cooperation:
www.researchgate.net/publication/34…nt_Cooperation
10. White Dominance and Inclusion: Spectrums of Organizational Characteristics. This work is adapted largely from the works of Tema Okun, Kenneth Jones, and Partners for Collaborative Change found at Changeelemental.org:
changeelemental.org/resources/kicki…premacy-culture