CHF 37.50

Navigating Academia As a Transnational Scholar From the Global South
Treasuring All the Knowledges

English · Paperback / Softback

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This book centers on the stories of transnational early-career scholars from the Global South who started their postgraduate studies as adult immigrants and international students. This is a fascinating guide to navigating academia for those whose biographies and educational trajectories are not fully recognized by the traditional academia.
Inspired by and rooted in Indigenous epistemologies, women of colour feminism, and decolonial studies, the 16 different authors - each transnational scholars from the Global South - consider the knowledge systems brought from home that helped them to navigate academia in a foreign country and the knowledges they wished they had before entering postgraduate study. Chapters cover:

  • Overcoming internalized fears and the lack of a sense of belonging.
  • Recognizing the diverse and abundant knowledges that transnational scholars bring to academia.
  • Building healthy relationships with advisors and mentors.
  • Dealing with unexpected events outside of academia while away from home.
  • Seeking jobs during and after the postgraduate degree.
Including contributions from leading transnational academics and supported by letters, poems, and drawings, this book serves as a source of information and inspiration for transnational early-career scholars navigating academia.
'Insider Guides to Success in Academia' offers support and practical advice to doctoral students and early-career researchers. Covering the topics that really matter, but which often get overlooked, this indispensable series provides practical and realistic guidance to address many of the needs and challenges of trying to operate, and remain, in academia.
These neat pocket guides fill specific and significant gaps in current literature. Each book offers insider perspectives on the often-implicit rules of the game - the things you need to know but usually aren't told by institutional postgraduate support, researcher development units, or supervisors - and will address a practical topic that is key to career progression. They are essential reading for doctoral students, early-career researchers, supervisors, mentors, or anyone looking to launch or maintain their career in academia.

About the author










Roxana Chiappa Baros is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Education at the University of Tarapacá, Chile.
Iris Viveros Avendaño is a part-time lecturer on Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies at the University of Washington, USA.


Report

"Using a refreshing multi-genre and translanguaging approach involving visual art, poetry, dialogues and text, Roxana Chiappa and Iris Viveros provide 14 women and gender non-confirming scholars with the relational space in this edited collection to foreground the immense knowledge and wisdom First Nations and Southern academics bring to universities. Their stories of courage, resilience and resistance will inspire readers and create opportunities for solidarity across cultural differences."
Catherine Manathunga, Co-Director of the UniSC Indigenous and Transcultural Research Centre, Professor of Education Research at the University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia.
"Navigating Academia as a Transnational Scholar from the Global South: Treasuring all the Knowledges is a beautiful, moving, and informative book. It is full of compelling stories about how transnational scholars from the Global South navigate Western academies. Using enticing poems, short vignettes, dialogues, stories, art and essays, the contributors show us vividly how and why both dreams and disappointments shaped their future. There are many lovely features of the book, including sensibilities about intercultural and ethnic interactions across a range of different landscapes: advisor/advisee relationships, classroom interactions, first encounters, the imposter syndrome, plus the significance of Indigenous knowledges-based on ways of knowing, being and doing.
The book, edited by Roxana Chiappa and Iris Viveros Avendano, is both humane and inspirational. Grounded in scholarship and written in clear language and meaningful modes of storytelling, the experiences of professional women from Africa, Asia and Latin America unfold before our eyes. The volume explores what it is like to grapple with class, gender, privilege, and hierarchy while offering practical, sensible ways for women to expand their knowledge and information-based skills - Indigenous and otherwise.
Part of the book's captivating power is its ability to weave the anguish of the contributors in a balanced, but impactful manner. Scholars and practitioners from the Global South and elsewhere should be enriched by the serious-minded and self-reflective tapestry of stories in this must-read book."
Dr. Carolyn Calloway-Thomas, Indiana University, Author of Empathy in the Global World: An Intercultural Perspective and coauthor of Intercultural Communication between Chinese and Americans.
"The book encourages us to question the established hierarchies within academic and scientific institutions that have long favored Western and Anglo-Saxon perspectives. Today's universities prioritize productivity and individual success where emphasizing collaborative methods of understanding and recognizing diverse cultural approaches to knowledge, education and learning can be rather difficult. The emphasis on individualism restricts our chances to collaborate and acknowledge that much of our knowledge comes from the relationships we cultivate over time. This book illustrates the small acts of defiance against the individualistic norms of academia and resilience in times of global conflicts and escalation of violence, which can serve as important resistance steps, critical not only for navigating diverse academic spaces but for fundamentally transforming them."
Dr. Larisa Kasumagic-Kafedzic, Professor, University of Sarajevo, Peace Education Hub, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
"A must-read in the turbulent waters of change in higher education, this book offers strategies from visionaries whose insights open pluriversal methods, reminding the academy of the vibrant solutions that undervalued forms of knowledge often generate. These "storytellers of futures of collective liberations" have honed their abundant skills on the rough edges of the academy and recognize that its revitalization is rooted in poetry, music, meditative practice, and community gathering. Guiding as a compact compass, brimming with hard-won wisdom from those charting new courses, this book of collective voices slips easily into a pocket or pack, ready to be consulted throughout one's academic voyage-from the very beginning through every stage that follows. Created for students and mentors, and filled with healing practical guidance and consejos, Treasuring All the Knowledges offers a collective remedy to the isolation and hierarchies of academic life."
Michelle Habell-Pallán, Professor, Department of Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies, and Director, Certificate in Public Critical Race Scholarship, University of Washington, USA.

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