Individual presentation
I am coloniality: embracing discomfort in my methodological praxis.
Judith Jordà i Frias
Centre for Social Studies-Faculty of Economics, University of Coimbra
ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0003-7076
Abstract
This article provides a decolonial reflexive exercise within an international context shaped by genocides. The underlying dilemma lies in how peace scholars can generate epistemic resistances while witnessing atrocities perpetuated by the structural entanglement of governmental, economic, legal and academic institutions. Researching liberation struggles, particularly those of populations living and dying under genocide, is as urgent as examining the colonial biases embedded in methodologies. Failure to address the existing disconnect between decolonial theory and methodological praxis perpetuates coloniality. In response to this gap, I propose an autoethnographic analysis that acknowledges the global coloniality underpinning International Relations and Peace and Conflict Studies, interrogates the epistemic assumptions informing methodologies, and engages in a self-critique of my own coloniality. Ultimately, this work contributes to the debate on methodological decoloniality, rooted in individual responsibility and a collective, territorially anchored practice, aiming to foster transformative and non-oppressive peace knowledge.
Key words: Resistances, Peace and Conflict Studies, responsibility, coloniality, methodologies, peace knowledge.
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