There is no future without Native and Black faculty in higher education

Autores

  • Amanda Tachine Arizona State University
  • Meseret Hailu Arizona State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5944/reec.43.2023.36648

Palavras-chave:

decolonización, indígenas, negros, profesorado, educación superior

Resumo

Using a letter-based methodology, we assert that higher education in the United States needs faculty members from Native and Black communities in order to be viable for presence and futures. We recognize that decolonization in higher education requires epistemological shifts that must be achieved by the people. Without people well-attuned to these epistemologies, such as critical Native and Black professors, this decolonization cannot happen. We also draw from extant literature and data from the National Center for Education Statistics to show how demographic disparities among faculty have been persistent over the past four decades. Throughout, we create a dialogue between decolonial and postcolonial literature. In doing so, we draw connections between these theories and education policies, practices, and pedagogies that advance more equitable and sustainable relationships in the relational flow of life where everyone and everything –both human and non-human–are deeply interconnected.

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Biografias Autor

Amanda Tachine, Arizona State University

Dr. Amanda R. Tachine is Navajo from Ganado, Arizona. She is Náneesht’ézhí Táchii’nii (Zuni Red Running into Water) born for Tł’ízí łání (Many Goats). She is an Assistant Professor in Educational Leadership & Innovation at Arizona State University. Amanda’s research explores the relationship between systemic and structural histories of settler colonialism and the ongoing erasure of Indigenous presence and belonging in college settings using qualitative Indigenous methodologies.

Meseret Hailu , Arizona State University

Dr. Meseret F. Hailu is an assistant professor of higher and postsecondary education at the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College, Arizona State University. Her research focuses on how institutions of higher education retain minoritized women in STEM pathways. Dr. Hailu is exploring two lines of research concerning the experiences of undergraduate Black women in different geographic settings: East Africa and the United States. Her primary research agenda investigates how articulations of identity shape educational retention and reflect institutional culture.

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Publicado

2023-06-30

Como Citar

Tachine, A., & Hailu , M. . (2023). There is no future without Native and Black faculty in higher education . Revista Española de Educación Comparada, (43), 88–101. https://doi.org/10.5944/reec.43.2023.36648

Edição

Secção

MONOGRÁFICO: Postcolonialismo y educación