Pathways for pragmatic decolonisation in research [version 1; peer review: 2 approved]

Background For too long, research on African peoples, histories, and ideas has been shaped by institutions and frameworks rooted in former colonial metropoles. This has sustained epistemic hierarchies that privilege Western paradigms while marginalising African knowledge systems. While there is incr...

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Main Author: Monique Kwachou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: F1000 Research Ltd 2025-04-01
Series:Open Research Europe
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Online Access:https://open-research-europe.ec.europa.eu/articles/5-112/v1
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author Monique Kwachou
author_facet Monique Kwachou
author_sort Monique Kwachou
collection DOAJ
description Background For too long, research on African peoples, histories, and ideas has been shaped by institutions and frameworks rooted in former colonial metropoles. This has sustained epistemic hierarchies that privilege Western paradigms while marginalising African knowledge systems. While there is increasing consensus on the need to decolonise research, less attention has been paid to how this can be achieved in practical terms. This paper argues that decentralisation—a concept familiar in governance—offers a useful metaphor and framework for rethinking how power over knowledge production can be redistributed to African scholars, institutions, and communities. Methods With this paper, the author adopts a conceptual-empirical approach grounded in personal research experiences within Cameroonian higher education and supported by a review of scholarly efforts by African researchers engaging with decolonial paradigms. Reflexive narrative inquiry is used to interrogate how decision-making, methodological choices, and epistemic validation processes unfold in research spaces. The paper reinterprets decentralisation to develop a framework for epistemic redistribution in knowledge production. Results Building on the idea that decolonisation entails decentralising epistemic power, the paper identifies one foundational starting point and three interconnected pathways for action. Theoretical pathways reclaim African epistemologies as valid and generative, disrupting Eurocentric dominance. Methodological pathways advance participatory, Afrocentric approaches grounded in lived experience and relational ethics. Administrative pathways call for institutional reforms that empower African scholars and communities in shaping research agendas, resource flows, and dissemination. Collectively, these pathways outline intentional shifts in authority over theory, method, and governance that operationalise decolonisation in knowledge production. Conclusions By re-framing decolonisation as decentralisation, this paper provides an accessible and actionable model for transforming knowledge production in African contexts. It contributes to bridging the theory-practice gap in decolonial discourse, offering concrete strategies to recentre African thought, amplify historically marginalised voices, and cultivate epistemic justice within and beyond the academy.
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spelling doaj-art-51a61b9b341a44e3858e94baf338085a2025-08-20T03:11:17ZengF1000 Research LtdOpen Research Europe2732-51212025-04-01510.12688/openreseurope.19943.121572Pathways for pragmatic decolonisation in research [version 1; peer review: 2 approved]Monique Kwachou0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0437-3715University of Bristol Faculty of Arts, Bristol, England, UKBackground For too long, research on African peoples, histories, and ideas has been shaped by institutions and frameworks rooted in former colonial metropoles. This has sustained epistemic hierarchies that privilege Western paradigms while marginalising African knowledge systems. While there is increasing consensus on the need to decolonise research, less attention has been paid to how this can be achieved in practical terms. This paper argues that decentralisation—a concept familiar in governance—offers a useful metaphor and framework for rethinking how power over knowledge production can be redistributed to African scholars, institutions, and communities. Methods With this paper, the author adopts a conceptual-empirical approach grounded in personal research experiences within Cameroonian higher education and supported by a review of scholarly efforts by African researchers engaging with decolonial paradigms. Reflexive narrative inquiry is used to interrogate how decision-making, methodological choices, and epistemic validation processes unfold in research spaces. The paper reinterprets decentralisation to develop a framework for epistemic redistribution in knowledge production. Results Building on the idea that decolonisation entails decentralising epistemic power, the paper identifies one foundational starting point and three interconnected pathways for action. Theoretical pathways reclaim African epistemologies as valid and generative, disrupting Eurocentric dominance. Methodological pathways advance participatory, Afrocentric approaches grounded in lived experience and relational ethics. Administrative pathways call for institutional reforms that empower African scholars and communities in shaping research agendas, resource flows, and dissemination. Collectively, these pathways outline intentional shifts in authority over theory, method, and governance that operationalise decolonisation in knowledge production. Conclusions By re-framing decolonisation as decentralisation, this paper provides an accessible and actionable model for transforming knowledge production in African contexts. It contributes to bridging the theory-practice gap in decolonial discourse, offering concrete strategies to recentre African thought, amplify historically marginalised voices, and cultivate epistemic justice within and beyond the academy.https://open-research-europe.ec.europa.eu/articles/5-112/v1Decolonising knowledge production Epistemic decentralisation Africaeng
spellingShingle Monique Kwachou
Pathways for pragmatic decolonisation in research [version 1; peer review: 2 approved]
Open Research Europe
Decolonising
knowledge production
Epistemic decentralisation
Africa
eng
title Pathways for pragmatic decolonisation in research [version 1; peer review: 2 approved]
title_full Pathways for pragmatic decolonisation in research [version 1; peer review: 2 approved]
title_fullStr Pathways for pragmatic decolonisation in research [version 1; peer review: 2 approved]
title_full_unstemmed Pathways for pragmatic decolonisation in research [version 1; peer review: 2 approved]
title_short Pathways for pragmatic decolonisation in research [version 1; peer review: 2 approved]
title_sort pathways for pragmatic decolonisation in research version 1 peer review 2 approved
topic Decolonising
knowledge production
Epistemic decentralisation
Africa
eng
url https://open-research-europe.ec.europa.eu/articles/5-112/v1
work_keys_str_mv AT moniquekwachou pathwaysforpragmaticdecolonisationinresearchversion1peerreview2approved