The rise of SciELO open source access academic journals in the South.
Source: Here’s one way to recover and protect Africa’s ‘lost science’
The rise of SciELO open source access academic journals in the South.
Source: Here’s one way to recover and protect Africa’s ‘lost science’
A wonderful act of scholarly generosity by Raewyn Connell:
We have just produced a written version of my workshop for early career researchers called “Writing for Research”. It discusses the nature of writing, research journals and how they operate, writing programmes, and related questions. It has a practical section on how to write a journal article, and a list of resources. It also has pretty pictures and some solid ideas about the social character of knowledge and the situation of knowledge workers.
You can download this important new publication (in Spanish):
Desde 1960, se reconoce la presencia de una estructura internacional desigual en la producción y circulación del conocimiento en el sistema científico internacional, fenómeno que se ha denominado dependencia académica. Esta realidad motivó acciones para promover la formación de cuadros científicos y estimular el vínculo entre instituciones y académicos de la periferia. Esto, teniendo en cuenta que las estructuras de producción de conocimiento de la periferia se veían comprometidas por el colonialismo y sus efectos perdurables.
Source: Dependencia Académica y Profesionalización en el Sur | SEPHIS
Researchers from Queensland University of Technology have recently applied a southern perspective to the administration of justice.
Issues of vital criminological research and policy significance abound in the global South, with important implications for South/North relations and for global security and justice. Having a theoretical framework capable of appreciating the significance of this global dynamic will contribute to criminology being able to better understand the challenges of the present and the future. We employ southern theory in a reflexive (and not a reductive) way to elucidate the power relations embedded in the hierarchal production of criminological knowledge that privileges theories, assumptions and methods based largely on empirical specificities of the global North. Our purpose is not to dismiss the conceptual and empirical advances in criminology, but to more usefully de-colonize and democratize the toolbox of available criminological concepts, theories and methods. As a way of illustrating how southern criminology might usefully contribute to better informed responses to global justice and security, this article examines three distinct projects that could be developed under such a rubric. These include, firstly, certain forms and patterns of crime specific to the global periphery; secondly, the distinctive patterns of gender and crime in the global south shaped by diverse cultural, social, religious and political factors and lastly the distinctive historical and contemporary penalities of the global south and their historical links with colonialism and empire building.
Source: Southern Criminology
Geoff Sharp, the founder of the radical journal Arena, who has died at the age of eighty-nine, once expressed Arena’s purpose by comparison with Arthur Stace, who roamed Sydney for decades, chalking the word “Eternity” in copperplate on the pavement.
Source: Geoff Sharp obituary: Editor led young thinkers to a new form of eternity
An upcoming conference on 9-13 November 2015 in Medellín, Colombia focusing on social justice and peace in the region.
Source: CLACSO
Thursday 5 November – Friday 6 November 2015
Gordon Greenwood Building, Union Rd, St Lucia Campus
Brought to you by the UQ Latin American Studies Forum and the Postcoloniality/Decoloniality Collective
We encourage submissions exploring any of the following themes:
For more information, go here.
Design theorist Tony Fry has a new studio coming in Tasmania to pursue his concepts of sustainment, borderlands thinking and unsettlement.
The Studio has an interdisciplinary and international focus. It is a new kind of venture and centres on two areas of activity: the creation of learning events; and the development of a design think-tank in partnership with education institutions
Now the southern perspective turns to occupational therapy. Does the discipline involved assumptions of individualism about work that are not reflective of many cultures of the south?
Southern Occupational Therapies: Emerging Identities, Epistemologies and Practices
From McKinnon, Katheran. 2013. “A Different Kind of Difference: Knowledge, Politics and Being Antipodean.” Dialogues in Human Geography: Commentary.
“Perhaps an ‘Antipodean’ identification is a way of capturing, valuing and placing at the centre the deliberate effort to look at the world from the ‘underside’.
Source: A different kind of difference