编织学生与导师的期望:在去殖民化斗争中的共同努力

Braiding together student and supervisor aspirations in a struggle to decolonize

ORGANIZATION · 2021
被引 14
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

通过毛利传统的编织河流隐喻,研究博士生与导师如何共同发展关系性和反思性研究身份,以推动管理知识和实践的去殖民化,并探讨在英大学体制与原住民社区合作中的张力。

Abstract

In this study, we explore a student-supervisor relationship and the development of relational and reflexive research identities as joint actions towards decolonizing management knowledge and practice. We frame a specific case of PhD supervision through he awa whiria the braided rivers metaphor, which emerges from Māori traditions. This metaphor recognizes a plurality of knowledge streams that can start from different sources, converge, braid and depart again, from the mountains to the sea. In this metaphor, each stream maintains its own autonomy and authority, but knowledge is created at an interface in partnership. We use this framing metaphor to illustrate the tensions between co-creating knowledge with an Indigenous community that a research student has kinship ties with and feels a strong affinity to, and navigating the institutional requirements for a PhD within a UK university. We surface two contributions that open up future possibilities for supervision, research and practice. The first is the use of the metaphor to frame the student-supervisor partnership and strategies for decolonizing management knowledge more broadly. The second is the requirement for relational and reflexive research identities in decolonizing management knowledge.

管理学教育学原住民研究去殖民化知识论