Decoloniality in Social Science Research Methods Part 2: Workshop 3 New
This is the third and last in a series of three workshops, which extend last term's teaching on 'Decoloniality in Research Methods'. In each session, participants will be presented with a range of theoretical concepts as well as case studies from a variety of scholars who mobilise these concepts to shape their methodologies. At least half of each session will be dedicated to practical application – participants will be encouraged to engage in a range of individual and group reflections, discussions and exercises.
Participants will be encouraged to reflect on how decolonial thought affects each stage of their research project. Beginning with initial research design and literature reviews, and ending with dissemination and research impact, each session focuses on a different stage in the research cycle, bringing a range of decolonial thought and scholar-activism into conversation with our research methods.
Please note: Participants can choose whether to attend a single session or multiple sessions, as each will be a 'stand alone' workshop. However, each workshop must be booked separately.
Session 3: From data collection to analysis to dissemination
In this session, we’ll begin with Linda Tuhiwai Smith’s (2012:226) claim that researchers ‘must get the story right as well as tell the story well’. We’ll think about what it means to analyse our data and create a product (a dissertation, research paper) which exists within the wider context of the academy. We’ll examine six different ways in which different researchers have oriented themselves towards their research, and their research towards the future (including an ‘ethics of care’, ‘rage anger and complaint’, ‘love, empathy, solidarity and desire’ and ‘action, speculation and movement’).
In terms of practical skills, we’ll think about our research outputs, the potential impacts of their design and dissemination and how these considerations might impact the earlier stages of our research projects, such as in the way we collect and store our data. Participants will also be encouraged to think about their own research orientation and place their project into a wider speculative context.
University postgraduate students from participating Departments. Further details regarding eligibility criteria are available here: https://www.training.cam.ac.uk/jsss/info/eligibility
The course is suitable for participants at any stage of a research project, with all levels of knowledge/experience of decolonial scholarship. Participants who did not attend last term's intro module ‘Decoloniality in Research Methods’ are encouraged to familiarise themselves with a small number of lecture slides that will be shared ahead of each workshop.
Number of sessions: 1
# | Date | Time | Venue | Trainer | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Wed 19 Mar 14:00 - 16:00 | 14:00 - 16:00 | University Centre, Cormack Room | map | Isabelle Higgins |
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