'Decolonizing Geography is both a landmark textbook and a compelling scholarly manifesto. It offers a wide and wise reckoning with geography's colonial past and lingering imperial and racist substance - with the promise of something better.'James Sidaway, National University of Singapore'This book provides an overview of the issues, presents the stakes and suggests admirably concrete and feasible steps towards producing broad decolonization in the academy. This will become an indispensable text for students, academics and perhaps even university administrators, including BAME/DEI officers. The author should be congratulated for the accomplishment.'Jovan Scott Lewis, University of California, Berkeley
Author's notePrefaceList of Tables, Textboxes and FiguresChapter 1 Why decolonize geography?Chapter 2 Postcolonialism and DecolonialityChapter 3 Decolonizing GeographiesChapter 4 Decolonizing Geographical ConceptsChapter 5 Decolonizing Geography's CurriculumChapter 6 Decolonizing geographical research practiceGlossaryBibliographyIndex
Sarah A. Radcliffe is Professor of Latin American Geography at the University of Cambridge.