Data Epistemologies, The Coloniality of Power, and Resistance

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Abstract

Data assemblages amplify historical forms of colonization through a complex arrangement of practices, materialities, territories, bodies, and subjectivities. Data-centric epistemologies should be understood as an expression of the coloniality of power manifested as the violent imposition of ways of being, thinking, and feeling that leads to the expulsion of human beings from the social order, denies the existence of alternative worlds and epistemologies, and threatens life on Earth. This article develops a theoretical model to analyze the coloniality of power through data and explores the multiple dimensions of coloniality as a framework for identifying ways of resisting data colonization. Finally, this article suggests possible alternative data epistemologies that are respectful of populations, cultural diversity, and environments.

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Ricaurte, P. (2019). Data Epistemologies, The Coloniality of Power, and Resistance. Television and New Media, 20(4), 350–365. https://doi.org/10.1177/1527476419831640

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