Un/learning to Disagree. A Response to "Pragmatist Thinking for a Populist Moment: Contingency and Racial Re-valuing in Education Governance"

Edda Sant, Marta da Costa

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

How should education governance respond to increasing polarized perspectives? Drawing on con- temporary African American pragmatism, Knight-Abowitz and Sellers’s article “Pragmatist Thinking for a Populist Moment: Contingency and Racial Re-valuing in Education Governance” interrogated the critical case of Black Lives Matters and anti-critical race theory protests in the USA education gov- ernance and concluded that inquiry and deliberation are needed to embrace more pluralistic forms of democracy. In our response, in which we engage with decolonial, agonistic, and speculative theories, we share Knight-Abowitz and Sellers’s analytical framings. Yet we wonder to what extent inquiry and deliberation can push off racial habits and whether we should aim to pluralize the same procedures of educational governmental negotiation beyond the traditional pragmatist framework.
Original languageEnglish
JournalDemocracy & Education
Volume32
Issue number2
Publication statusPublished - 16 Oct 2024

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