Neoliberalism

Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher in the Oval Office

By Portia Jennings Portia Jennings is currently studying a master’s in human rights at the University of Sussex. Her research focuses on migrants’ rights and the rights of precarious workers within neoliberal labour markets. She previously represented asylum seekers, victims of trafficking and modern slavery in legal claims against the UK Home Office. Neoliberalism emerged […]

Colonial Intellectual Workforces

By Raewyn Connell Raewyn Connell is an Australian feminist sociologist and Professor Emerita at the University of Sydney, best known for co-founding masculinity studies and developing the influential concept of hegemonic masculinity. Her work spans gender, class, education and global social theory, including the notable book Southern Theory. Connell has published extensively and is widely […]

Colonial Knowledge Institutions

By Raewyn Connell Raewyn Connell is an Australian feminist sociologist and Professor Emerita at the University of Sydney, best known for co-founding masculinity studies and developing the influential concept of hegemonic masculinity. Her work spans gender, class, education and global social theory, including the notable book Southern Theory. Connell has published extensively and is widely […]

Southern Theory

By Raewyn Connell Raewyn Connell is an Australian feminist sociologist and Professor Emerita at the University of Sydney, best known for co-founding masculinity studies and developing the influential concept of hegemonic masculinity. Her work spans gender, class, education and global social theory, including the notable book Southern Theory. Connell has published extensively and is widely […]

The global economy of knowledge

By Raewyn Connell Raewyn Connell is an Australian feminist sociologist and Professor Emerita at the University of Sydney, best known for co-founding masculinity studies and developing the influential concept of hegemonic masculinity. Her work spans gender, class, education and global social theory, including the notable book Southern Theory. Connell has published extensively and is widely […]

Eurocentrism and Coloniality of Knowledge in Contemporary Contexts

By Yasmin Carpenter Coloniality of knowledge is not a relic of the past — it is the invisible architecture that continues to shape how the world defines truth, reason, and intellectual value. While formal colonialism ended, the hierarchies of knowledge and ways of knowing it created persist in the institutions that regulate knowledge production today: […]

Coloniality of Being and the Dehumanization of the Subaltern

By Yasmin Carpenter The concept of coloniality of being deepens the decolonial critique by addressing the ontological dimension of colonial domination — the ways in which colonialism not only organized power and knowledge but also shaped who counts as fully human. If the coloniality of power orders the world through hierarchies of race and labor, […]

Coloniality of Knowledge and Coloniality of Power

By Yasmin Carpenter The notions of coloniality of knowledge and coloniality of power are among the most influential contributions of Latin American decolonial thought. Developed by Aníbal Quijano and expanded by Walter Mignolo, Ramón Grosfoguel, and others, they describe how colonial domination operates not only through political and economic control but also through the control […]

Modernity and eurocentrism

By Yasmin Carpenter The concepts of modernity and Eurocentrism lie at the core of the decolonial critique of Western thought. Far from being neutral or universal categories, they describe a historical project that has defined what counts as reason, progress, and humanity from a specifically European standpoint. The decolonial perspective argues that modernity’s celebrated ideals—rationality, […]

Colonialism, coloniality and decoloniality

By Yasmin Carpenter The concepts of colonialism, coloniality, and decoloniality describe a historical and epistemic continuum that links past empires to present global hierarchies of power and knowledge. While colonialism refers to the formal systems of domination established through conquest, occupation, and empire, coloniality designates the endurance of those logics long after colonial administrations have […]