Abstract
This paper explores the complex relationship between academic researchers working in the area of ‘International Development and Education’ and foreign intervention in the Global South. I make the case for stronger definitional links between ‘colonialism’ and ‘development’. In this, I pay attention to how ‘soft’ and ‘hard’ sides of colonial strategy operated symbiotically and evidence parallel occurrences in Post 9/11 Western-led military/development activities. Drawing on ‘education’ examples, I reflect on our fields entanglements in the messy politics, partnerships and funding regimes of our unequal global order and the ways that we, as both researchers and practitioners, become ‘implicated’. I also explore sites of counter-hegemony that span similar timeframes, including my engagements with popular education in social movements in Colombia, and make the case for a radical educational internationalism.
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Novelli, M. (2023). Politics, power & partnerships: the imperial past and present of international education and development (BAICE presidential address 2022). Compare, 53(6), 915–929. https://doi.org/10.1080/03057925.2023.2234277
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