TY - BOOK
T1 - Decolonizing Western-Indigenous Dialogues
T2 - Interwoven Epistemologies for Multiple Modernities
AU - Cajete, Gregory
AU - Ditlhake, Kefilwe Johanna
AU - do Carmo dos Santos Gonçalves, Maria
AU - Kiewitt, Karsten
AU - Lutz, Ronald
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Gregory Cajete, Kefilwe Johanna Ditlhake, Maria do Carmo dos Santos Gonçalves, Karsten Kiewitt, Ronald Lutz, 2025. All rights reserved.
PY - 2025/9/4
Y1 - 2025/9/4
N2 - The world is facing enormous challenges, from ever-growing global inequality to climate change to the continuing fallout from the Covid pandemic. It is becoming increasingly clear that the origin of these challenges lies in the economic models and imperial lifestyles perpetuated by the Global North. In order to find new answers to the world's biggest challenges, then, it is necessary for the Global North to acknowledge Indigenous knowledge systems as unique and legitimate epistemologies and to engage in dialogues with them. This collection brings together contributions from Indigenous and non-Indigenous authors to promote that dialogue. It provides a unique, rare forum for discourse between the expressive potentials of differing world views, and ultimately, for developing cooperation in the terms of Eisenstein's notion of interbeing, which counteracts the "History of Separation" between nature and culture and between Global South and Global North. What emerges is a path forward towards a new, interwoven modernity characterized by an embrace of separate, but mutually constitutive, ways of knowing. For its wide topical and geographic breadth, and for its bringing together of Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars around the world, this book is a must-read for researchers and students interested in indigenous studies and decolonial approaches to international development.
AB - The world is facing enormous challenges, from ever-growing global inequality to climate change to the continuing fallout from the Covid pandemic. It is becoming increasingly clear that the origin of these challenges lies in the economic models and imperial lifestyles perpetuated by the Global North. In order to find new answers to the world's biggest challenges, then, it is necessary for the Global North to acknowledge Indigenous knowledge systems as unique and legitimate epistemologies and to engage in dialogues with them. This collection brings together contributions from Indigenous and non-Indigenous authors to promote that dialogue. It provides a unique, rare forum for discourse between the expressive potentials of differing world views, and ultimately, for developing cooperation in the terms of Eisenstein's notion of interbeing, which counteracts the "History of Separation" between nature and culture and between Global South and Global North. What emerges is a path forward towards a new, interwoven modernity characterized by an embrace of separate, but mutually constitutive, ways of knowing. For its wide topical and geographic breadth, and for its bringing together of Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars around the world, this book is a must-read for researchers and students interested in indigenous studies and decolonial approaches to international development.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105020356736
M3 - Book
AN - SCOPUS:105020356736
SN - 9781350425200
BT - Decolonizing Western-Indigenous Dialogues
PB - Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.
ER -