Skip to content

Can decolonization come from the colonizers?

Michelle Amri and colleagues analyzed 91 articles on decolonizing global health, and noted a considerable lack of consensus regarding what ‘decolonization’ means. They concluded that decolonization of global health involves:

  1. Overhauling existing unequal power structures,
  2. Establishing agency and self-determination of the Global South,
  3. Epistemic reformation and epistemic and ontological pluralism,
  4. Education, and
  5. Inclusivity, solidarity, and allyship.

They noted that only only 22% of first authors of retrieved articles had an affiliation in a low- and/or middle-income country. Can decolonization emanate from the colonizers, who control the inequitable power, epistemic, and other structures?

Check out their analysis: Decolonizing global health: a scoping review of its key components, proposed actions, and contributors