Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Decolonisation is not even a footnote: On the dominant ideologies and smokescreens in South African higher education
View through CrossRef
The turn to democracy in South Africa brought hope for a higher education sector that would play a key role in tackling racial inequalities and injustices. However, transformation promises ended up being largely smokescreens for maintaining entrenched racist and capitalist logics rooted in colonialism and apartheid. Instead of focusing on epistemic decolonisation, universities became commodified and commercialised neoliberal enterprises focused on the maintenance of Eurocentric epistemic hegemony. In this conceptual article framed within the decolonial theoretical framework, we critically interrogate how two dominant ideologies – the Rainbow Nation and neoliberalism – have sidelined fundamental transformation and epistemic decolonisation in South Africa. Focusing on the Department of Higher Education and Training’s Strategic Plan 2020–2025, we illustrate that decolonisation is not government’s priority and that neoliberal visions continue to dominate strategic planning for higher education. We argue that the lack of political will and policy alignment from the government will contribute to the further entrenchment of coloniality, Eurocentricity and neoliberal logics at universities. We conclude with the call for critical engagement with the history of universities and their role in propagating and supporting colonialism and apartheid and argue that progressive scholars and students must continue to organise within South Africa and beyond and work on the radical dismantling of the Eurocentric and neoliberal universities.Contribution: While other scholars have engaged separately with neoliberalism and the Rainbow Nation and their impact on higher education in South Africa, in this article, we bring these two ideologies together to show how they have combined to prevent decolonisation of higher education.
Title: Decolonisation is not even a footnote: On the dominant ideologies and smokescreens in South African higher education
Description:
The turn to democracy in South Africa brought hope for a higher education sector that would play a key role in tackling racial inequalities and injustices.
However, transformation promises ended up being largely smokescreens for maintaining entrenched racist and capitalist logics rooted in colonialism and apartheid.
Instead of focusing on epistemic decolonisation, universities became commodified and commercialised neoliberal enterprises focused on the maintenance of Eurocentric epistemic hegemony.
In this conceptual article framed within the decolonial theoretical framework, we critically interrogate how two dominant ideologies – the Rainbow Nation and neoliberalism – have sidelined fundamental transformation and epistemic decolonisation in South Africa.
Focusing on the Department of Higher Education and Training’s Strategic Plan 2020–2025, we illustrate that decolonisation is not government’s priority and that neoliberal visions continue to dominate strategic planning for higher education.
We argue that the lack of political will and policy alignment from the government will contribute to the further entrenchment of coloniality, Eurocentricity and neoliberal logics at universities.
We conclude with the call for critical engagement with the history of universities and their role in propagating and supporting colonialism and apartheid and argue that progressive scholars and students must continue to organise within South Africa and beyond and work on the radical dismantling of the Eurocentric and neoliberal universities.
Contribution: While other scholars have engaged separately with neoliberalism and the Rainbow Nation and their impact on higher education in South Africa, in this article, we bring these two ideologies together to show how they have combined to prevent decolonisation of higher education.
Related Results
Navigating Language Ideologies Through Translanguaging in EAL Classrooms of Pakistan: A Sociolinguistics Perspective
Navigating Language Ideologies Through Translanguaging in EAL Classrooms of Pakistan: A Sociolinguistics Perspective
Language is a tool for instructing and expressing a variety of perspectives. This study aimed to explore the ideologies navigated through translanguaging in Pakistani institutions ...
Academics' conceptions of higher education decolonisation
Academics' conceptions of higher education decolonisation
The urgency for a decolonised university curriculum in South Africa, occasioned by student protests, demands interrogation of conceptions of decolonisation academic staff hold, see...
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
When characters in the Fox Television sitcom The Mindy Project call Mindy Lahiri fat, Mindy sees it as a case of misidentification. She reminds the character that she is a “petite ...
A Historical Review of African Scholarship and the Decolonial Discourse: Challenges and Prospects
A Historical Review of African Scholarship and the Decolonial Discourse: Challenges and Prospects
African scholarship plays an important role in asserting the value of African epistemologies and those of the global South in the knowledge economy. This is pertinent to higher edu...
Mix En Meng It Op: Emile YX?'s Alternative Race and Language Politics in South African Hip-Hop
Mix En Meng It Op: Emile YX?'s Alternative Race and Language Politics in South African Hip-Hop
This paper explores South African hip-hop activist Emile YX?'s work to suggest that he presents an alternative take on mainstream US and South African hip-hop. While it is arguable...
Analiza prikaza afrikanerskog identiteta u povijesnim romanima Karela Schoemana iz postkolonijalne perspektive
Analiza prikaza afrikanerskog identiteta u povijesnim romanima Karela Schoemana iz postkolonijalne perspektive
This dissertation analyzes the narrative strategies in five novels by the South African author Karel Schoeman, specifically the way in which they undermine key historiographical st...
African American Humor
African American Humor
The sophistication of the African American humor tradition testifies to its centrality in African American culture. Since its initial emergence in the contexts of enslavement, wher...
Modern African Ideologies
Modern African Ideologies
Abstract
The chapter discusses African ideologies from the eighteenth to the twenty-first centuries. Two distinguishing characteristics are identified: a definition ...

