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This thought-provoking volume delves into the intricate interplay of time, ecology, and global racial capitalism, inviting readers to reimagine the planetary and ecological landscapes.
In this online Inclusive Spaces event Nai Lee Kalema and Felicity Atekpe explore the importance of decolonial, intersectional, and other social justice frameworks in the rise of digital technology and artificial intelligence (AI).
Decolonization: A Short History" by Jan C. Jansen, published in 2019, offers an accessible overview of decolonisation in the twentieth century.
"Inclusive Pedagogies for Early Childhood Education: Respecting and Responding to Differences in Learning" by Carmel Conn and Alison Murphy, published in 2022, offers an exploration of inclusive pedagogies in early childhood education.
"Radical Pedagogies" by Beatriz Colomina, Ignacio Gonzalez Galan, Evangelos Kotsioris, and Anna-Maria Meister, published in 2022, explores the transformative experiments in architectural education following World War II.
"Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies: Teaching and Learning for Justice in a Changing World" authored by Django Paris and H. Samy Alim advocates for a transformative approach to education that embraces and nurtures cultural diversity.
The 2022 'Colonial Racial Capitalism' publication offers an examination of the intersections between colonialism, racism, and capitalism.
Dr. Barbara Lipietz shares the Navigating Space Under Lockdown project, exploring how young people’s experiences of home, work, mobility, community and well-being have been affected by the pandemic and by prolonged periods of lockdown.
Dr. Nick Hughes, Associate Professor in Sustainable Resource Governance, shares Aimé Césaire's "Notebook of a Return to My Native Land" ("Cahier d'un retour au pays natal")
Recommended by lecturer Blanche Cameron and translated by Lee Ambrozy, this anthology delves into the insightful musings of the renowned Chinese artist, shedding light on China's societal shifts and Ai's perspectives.
In light of recent events, such as George Floyd’s death, we have granted ourselves the liberation of being able to address the idea of race and thus the realisation of how evident it is that change needs to happen. Shaunee Lyn Tan explores further.
Xan Xacobo Goetzee-Barral presents the ephemerality of the queer nightclub as a means for survival (at the scale of the city), a means for queer intimacy (the nightclub) and a means for promoting inclusivity (the body).
Engaging the typology of an embassy to navigate and expose western perceptions and prejudices associated with China, the project aims to provide a counter-argument in response to the misconception of the country, the community and myself, a second generation Chinese-British immigrant.