Results 201 to 210 of about 30,549 (310)
Abstract Introduction Global collaborations, particularly those between low‐income (LIC) and high‐income countries (HIC), may inadvertently reproduce the very power differentials they aspire to overcome. The Toronto Addis Ababa Academic Collaboration (TAAAC) is a partnership model deliberately built to follow a relational and invited guest model of ...
Dawit Wondimagegn +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Understandings and practices of solidarity in global health: a scoping review of the literature. [PDF]
Noh JE, Prainsack B, Weiss E, Pratt B.
europepmc +1 more source
CRT and Immigration: Settler Colonialism, Foreign Indigeneity, and the Education of Racial Perception [PDF]
López, Josué
core +1 more source
Lonergan, Decolonization and First Nations Peoples: An Apologetic from an Insider on the Outside
Abstract The purpose of this article is to respond critically to a research project initiated out of the Board of the Lonergan Research Institute that seeks to expose colonialist assumptions in Lonergan's thought. Some of the initiatives seek to link Lonergan with complicity in Canadian residential schools, spiritual violence, and cultural genocide ...
John D. Dadosky
wiley +1 more source
Decolonizing the Global: Contested Cosmopolitanisms in Global Queer Activism. [PDF]
Jung M.
europepmc +1 more source
Beancounting Diversity in Business Schools
Journal of Management Studies, EarlyView.
Wafa Ben Khaled, Alessandro Ghio
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT How are online discourses in subissues within counternationalist movements constructed? This study better understands what comprises digital counternationalist dissent against right‐wing nationalism, finding that right‐wing nationalism's success can also be explained through limitations in counternationalist discourse.
Mohammad Amaan Siddiqui
wiley +1 more source
Pathways for pragmatic decolonisation in research. [PDF]
Kwachou M.
europepmc +1 more source
Between and Beyond: Negotiating Belonging Within Queer Borderlands
ABSTRACT Belonging is an affective, social and biopolitical phenomenon which is relationally negotiated and which produces material and symbolic ‘borders’. Subsequently, the politics of belonging refers to the construction, maintenance and policing of the borders of belonging.
Meg Poff
wiley +1 more source

