Session 04

04. Decolonizing Social Science Methodology

Session Informations:

Day: Thursday, Sept. 8th
Time: 10:45 – 12:45 (BRT)
Duration: 120 min

Session Abstract:

While there has been a longer ongoing debate on decolonizing social theory, the debate on decolonizing social science methodology has just recently started. In this context, in the course of the SMUS Conference in Botswana in 2021, contributors have identified specific ways of thinking about decolonizing social science methodology but also raised new methodological questions, namely: (1) The ideological view of decoloniality dismantles ‘positivist’ epistemology and philosophy of science of the Global North and reveals power relations that result in epistemicide. The challenges of this view are (a) that – if one replaces Northern ‘positivist’ epistemologies – then what should they be replaced with? How can this be done better? If relativism is taken seriously, then what is the difference between ‘fake news’ and ‘alternative facts’ and scientific knowledge? Moreover, many research questions in the social sciences require to be sure about (dis)similarities between contexts, e.g. in social inequality research. (b) The debate has also shown that the ideological view of decoloniality reproduces the fallacy it wants to overcome by making monolithic assumptions of ‘Eurocentricsm’, ‘The West’ and the ‘Global North’, thus ignoring that positivism has been outdated in Continental European philosophy of science for almost 200 years and that today, there is a variety of epistemic cultures not only in the Global South but also in the Global North (e.g., pragmatism, phenomenology, critical rationalism, critical theory, radical constructivism, relationism, postmodernism, anarchism, epistemological historism, fallibism, revolutionary epistemology, postcolonialism or empirically-grounded philosophy of science). Today, a wide range of epistemological schools exists, and many of those can be much more easily linked to Southern epistemologies than 19th century positivism. So instead of asking how to overcome Northern epistemologies, it might ask: (1) What are the (dis)similarities between specific epistemological schools? How can they productively learn from each other, complement each other, be productively linked, refined and integrated? (2) Epistemic reconstruction shows how scholars of the Global South are (under)represented in the international system of science. In addition, power relations created by this system of science may have produced Global North scholars acting merely as ‘messengers’ of Northern or Western epistemology. This reconstruction reveals the dilemma that the price of being assimilated to the variants of Western modernity is (self-induced) epistemicide and lack of self-confidence – the price for reconstructing categories of thoughts from one’s local and particular tradition in contrasts makes it hard to link to global social science discourse. So if scholars from the Global South want to be linked to global sociological discourse, how can they be stronger integrated in this discourse? How to change the mindset of scholars of the Global South to be more self-confident? Is it enough to simply differentiate between the ‘Global North’ and the ‘Global South’, or when and how do we need to be more refined in distinguishing scholars social position, e.g. by differentiating between different countries or world regions of the Global South or by scholars’ class, gender and race? (3) Decolonial reflexivity acknowledges different types of epistemologies and stresses collaboration, conversation and dialogue. From this point of view, the important ques-tions are how to go about this. How can scholars from the Global South become more visible and communicate on eye-level with colleagues from the Global North? What avenues can we explore in order to make dialogue or conversation and epistemological humility possible? Are there practical solutions (e.g. in the way of doing and writing up research and organizing conferences) for furthering this goal? Papers in this session should follow up on one of the questions and discuss possible challenges and solutions. Alternatively, they can raise new questions that have so far been ignored in the debate.
 

Paper presentations:

  • Decolonizing Social Science Methodology: an Introduction
    • Authors: Gabriel Faimau, Nina Baur
  • Co-Production and the Quest for Knowledge Decolonisation in the Global South: Promises, Challenges and Suggestions on Ethics and Methods
    • Author: Pius Adejoh
  • Guerreiro Ramos’ Contributions to a Decolonized Sociology
    • Authors: Cristiane Garcia Pires, Pedro Hadelich Brasiliense
  • Connecting East-West in East Asia Culture Region: It’s Two Hearts Living in Two Separated Worlds?
    • Authors: Nguyễn Thị Bích Ngọc; Soomi Jeong; Trần Văn Quyến; Satoko Tabata; Hồng-Ngọc Nguyễn
  • Contested Comparisons: Deliberative Practices from the West and Its Spatial ‘Others’ – A Reconstruction of a Postcolonial Methodological Critique
    • Author: Volkan Sayman
  • Decolonizing Public Consciousness and Social Science Methodology: Ukraine’s Experience of the War in 2022
    • Author: Olena Semenets