TY - JOUR
T1 - Disobedience, (dis)embodied knowledge management, and decolonization: higher education in The Gambia
AU - Mbah, Marcellus
AU - Johnson, Ane Turner
PY - 2024/2/24
Y1 - 2024/2/24
N2 - In this work, we sought to uncover the key strategies and challenges to the integration of Indigenous knowledge as knowledge management practices at a public university in The Gambia. It is often axiomatic in the literature that the incorporation of diverse epistemologies is a key resource for sustainable development; therefore, activities associated with the management of knowledge, particularly in higher education, are worthy of elucidation. We discovered that knowledge management activities at a university in The Gambia were often informal and required the invisible work of faculty. It was through the implicit use of tacit knowledge and epistemic disobedience that faculty were able to build upon a colonized curriculum that denied the presence of other knowledge. However, in the end, faculty were dependent on the power of referents within and without the institution to formalize their knowledge management practices. This work fills an essential gap in the extant literature on how the work of university faculty and managers, when situated within a knowledge management perspective, can contribute to decolonization and foster sustainable development.
AB - In this work, we sought to uncover the key strategies and challenges to the integration of Indigenous knowledge as knowledge management practices at a public university in The Gambia. It is often axiomatic in the literature that the incorporation of diverse epistemologies is a key resource for sustainable development; therefore, activities associated with the management of knowledge, particularly in higher education, are worthy of elucidation. We discovered that knowledge management activities at a university in The Gambia were often informal and required the invisible work of faculty. It was through the implicit use of tacit knowledge and epistemic disobedience that faculty were able to build upon a colonized curriculum that denied the presence of other knowledge. However, in the end, faculty were dependent on the power of referents within and without the institution to formalize their knowledge management practices. This work fills an essential gap in the extant literature on how the work of university faculty and managers, when situated within a knowledge management perspective, can contribute to decolonization and foster sustainable development.
KW - Africa; the Gambia
KW - Epistemic disobedience
KW - Higher education
KW - Indigenous knowledge
KW - Knowledge management
KW - Sustainable development
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85187310753&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10734-024-01192-3
DO - 10.1007/s10734-024-01192-3
M3 - Article
SN - 0018-1560
JO - Higher Education
JF - Higher Education
ER -