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|a The Palgrave Handbook on Decoloniality in Asia
|h [electronic resource] /
|c edited by Phoebe Zoe Maria U. Sanchez, Regletto Aldrich D. Imbong, Matthew Ming-tak Chew, Caroline M. Schöpf.
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|a 1st ed. 2025.
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|a Singapore :
|b Springer Nature Singapore :
|b Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,
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|a XXXVII, 639 p. 6 illus., 4 illus. in color.
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|a PART 1 Setting the Tone -- Decoloniality in Asia -- Capitalism, Colonialism and Racism -- Continuing the Decolonial and Postcolonial Dialogue -- PART 2 Decoloniality as New-type Epistemology -- (De)Colonization of Knowledge: Classic Conceptual Follies with Special Reference to India -- Decolonizing Policy Studies Epistemology: Thainess and Thai Policy Style -- Los Esclavos de Hoy, Los Tiranos de Mañana: Human Rights as Resistance to Colonization and as a Promise for a Common World -- Anti-Immigrant Sentiment as Lack of Awareness on Global Inequalities and Indebtedness -- PART 3 Established Cases -- European Expansionism and Its Impact on Contemporary Global Trade and Commerce -- Palestine, a Cornerstone of the National Struggle Against Western Direct and Symbolic Colonialism in Natural Syria: From Sykes Picot to Gaza -- The Abolition of the Death Penalty and the Execution of Africans for Drug Offences in Asia -- From Governor-General to President: Confronting the Legacy of the Colonial State in the Philippines -- PART 4 Decoloniality in Political Economy, Agriculture and Entrepreneurship -- The Epistemic and Structural Power of Financial Dependency: Weaving Economic Coloniality with Dependency Theory Toward an Imperative of Dual Delinking -- Precision Agriculture and the Emergence of Data Colonialism -- "Everyone Here Wants to be a Boss": Decolonizing Entrepreneurship in the Clothing Market of Pernambuco, Brazil -- PART 5 Decoloniality on Gender and Feminisms -- Decolonial Journeys: Gender and Society -- Dap-ay as a Transformative Site for Philippine Itneg Women's Decolonial Feminist Epistemologies -- Transnational Women Domestic Laborers: Filipino Women in the Care Chain Industry -- The Position of Vietnamese Women: Fundamental Changes During the Process of Decolonization -- The Palestinian Struggle for Liberation: A Comprehensive Examination of Women and Children's Resilience, Agency, and Challenges -- Democratizing Health and Decolonizing Democracy in Malawi - Matupi athu Moyo wathu/Our bodies Our lives -- PART 6 Decoloniality in Language, Art and Popular Culture -- Dim Prospects on Language Policies Under the Marcos Jr. Regime -- Entangled Forms: Hybridity and the Filipino Artist as a Colonial Speaker -- How Coloniality Operates Differently in The Global East Than The Global South: The Intellectual Delegitimation Of ‘Lowbrow’ Local Culture In Hong Kong -- Sports and Decoloniality: The Case of the Kabaddi and the Sepak Takraw in the Asian Games -- Anti-Imperialist Cultural Revolution and the Covert Presence of a Decolonial Subject -- PART 7 Decolonial Theologies and National Liberation -- Liberation Theology and Decolonial Turn in Latin America -- Filipino Liberation Theology and the Struggle for National Freedom and Democracy -- National Liberation Movements and Amílcar Cabral’s Theory of Revolutionary Decolonization -- Decolonization, Rizal and the Pantheon of Heroes in the Early Aglipayan Texts -- Conclusion.
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|a ‘An essential panoramic work that proves beyond doubt that decolonization is a planetary force for mobilization and change.’ —Sabelo J Ndlovu Gatsheni, Professor, University of Bayreuth, Germany, and author of Beyond Coloniality of Internationalism: Reworlding the World from the Global South ‘An erudite, heartening, imaginative and unremitting examination of coloniality in Asia. Surely to be a read for years to come, this book offers a fearless critique of colonial epistemology, practice, and policy. Crafting new tools for empirical and epistemic inquiry, we are invited to engage possibilities for a just world beyond 'destroying the Masters' house with the Master's tools.’ —Tamari Kitossa, Professor, Brock University, Department of Sociology, Canada This Handbook brings together a plethora of decolonial perspectives from and about Asian countries beyond Southeast Asia. Complementing existing scholarship on decolonisation in Latin America and Africa, emerging and established scholars from the Global North and the Global South cover politically urgent, vital and underexplored topics from the social sciences and humanities. An important compendium, more than 25 original contributions bring debates happening in various parts of the world strongly into conversation with similar debates in the West where there has been little reciprocal exchange. Bringing to the fore the importance of a paradigm shift within academia, this first-of-its-kind Handbook is useful for policy-makers, scholars and students of postcolonial and decolonial studies, sociology, development studies and social movements. Phoebe Zoe Maria U. Sanchez is retired Professor of Sociology and History, University of the Philippines Cebu, and refugee research fellow at the Deutsches Zentrum für Integrations- und Migrationsforschung (DeZIM-Institut) in Berlin, Germany under the Alexander von Humboldt – Philipp Schwartz Initiative for Scholars at Risk (SAR). Regletto Aldrich D. Imbong is Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of the Philippines Cebu. Matthew Ming-tak Chew is Associate Professor at the Department of Digital Arts and Creative Industries, Lingnan University, Hong Kong. Caroline M. Schöpf is Assistant Professor at the Department of Sociology, University of the Philippines Diliman.
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|a Accessibility summary: This PDF does not fully comply with PDF/UA standards, but does feature limited screen reader support, described non-text content (images, graphs), bookmarks for easy navigation and searchable, selectable text. Users of assistive technologies may experience difficulty navigating or interpreting content in this document. We recognize the importance of accessibility, and we welcome queries about accessibility for any of our products. If you have a question or an access need, please get in touch with us at accessibilitysupport@springernature.com.
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|a No reading system accessibility options actively disabled
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|a Publisher contact for further accessibility information: accessibilitysupport@springernature.com
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|a Sociology.
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|a Race.
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|a Economic development.
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|a Imperialism.
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|a Archaeology
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|a World history.
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|a Sociology.
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|a Race and Ethnicity Studies.
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|a Development Studies.
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|a Imperialism and Colonialism.
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|a Global South Methods and Theory.
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|a World History, Global and Transnational History.
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|a Sanchez, Phoebe Zoe Maria U.
|e editor.
|4 edt
|4 http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edt
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|a Imbong, Regletto Aldrich D.
|e editor.
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|4 http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edt
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|a Chew, Matthew Ming-tak.
|e editor.
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|4 http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edt
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|a Schöpf, Caroline M.
|e editor.
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|4 http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edt
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|a SpringerLink (Online service)
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|i Printed edition:
|z 9789819623358
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|i Printed edition:
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