The Handbook of Critical Methodologies covers everything from the history of critical and indigenous theory and how it came to inform and impact qualitative research and indigenous peoples to the critical constructs themselves, including race/diversity, gender representation (queer theory, feminism), culture, and politics to the meaning of "critical" concepts within specific disciplines (critical psychology, critical communication/mass communication, media studies, cultural studies, political economy, education, sociology, anthropology, history, etc. - all in an effort to define emancipatory research and explore what critical qualitative research can do for social change and social justice.
The Routledge Handbook of Critical Indigenous Studies is the first comprehensive overview of the rapidly expanding field of Indigenous scholarship.
Bartlett, C., Marshall, M., & Marshall, A. (2012). Two-eyed seeing and other lessons learned within a co-learning journey of bringing together Indigenous and mainstream knowledges and ways of knowing. Journal of Environmental Studies ...
Origins: The Misrepresentation of a Philosopher The research for this article began on 28 September 2003 with a “Google” search of the phrase “one law for all.” It returned ,829 hits. A review of Web pages from the search showed that ...
This is the point in Henry Giroux's “Violence of Organized Forgetting” (2013) and Neoliberalism's War on Higher Education (2014) and the point made by Charles Garoian and Yvonne Gaudelius (2008) in their Spectacle Pedagogy.
... the dialectics between governance and economic systems (i.e., capitalism, socialism, nonmonetized systems of reciprocity); and the relationship between settler colonialism, patriarchy, and heteronormativity (Grande & Nichols, 2014).
Toronto: Samuel Stevens. Spender, Dale. 1980. Man Made Languages. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. ... UN Commission on Human Rights, E/CN.4/Sub.21/1992/93, Annex I: 44–52. . 1992. Record of the United Nations Conference on Environment ...
This essential volume explores intersections of imperialism and research - specifically, the ways in which imperialism is embedded in disciplines of knowledge and tradition as 'regimes of truth.
In this collection, editors Django Paris and Maisha Winn have selected essays written by top scholars in education on humanizing approaches to qualitative and ethnographic inquiry with youth and their communities.
94) The zine Shovel Bum (Figures 27.1, 27.4, and 27.5) is a clear example of how work generates self-publication and how scholars can fruitfully approach work questions about his relatively unique mode of employment.
Acaoohkiwina and Acimonwina: Traditional Narratives of the Rock Cree Indians. Ottawa: Canadian Museum of Civilization. Carlson, Nathan D. 2009. “Reviving Witiko (Wendigo): An ethnohistory of cannibal monsters in the Athabasca District ...