Abstract
Engaging those who have been epistemically marginalized within academia can make for more robust, comprehensive and nuanced theory. However, as a form of relationally accountable scholarship, the contributions of Grounded Normative Theory (GNT) can be much further reaching – enacting an ethical form of theorizing-with that is foundational to justice locally and globally. In this article, the author argues that GNT can not only enhance theorists’ and their collaborators’ collective capacities for transformative change, but can also advance epistemic justice within knowledge systems. When foregrounding relationality as enacted by Indigenous and Indigenous feminist theoretical traditions, the grounded normative theorist can actively disrupt and challenge individualist, colonial and extractive approaches to research. In this way, GNT as a tradition can open up pathways for ‘acting otherwise’ that enable theorists to contribute to collaboratively weaving the grounds for global justice.
Original language | Canadian English |
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Title of host publication | The Oxford Handbook of Grounded and Engaged Normative Theory |
Editors | Brooke Ackerly, Antje Wiener, Luis Cabrera, Fonna Forman, Genevieve Fuji Johnson, Gina Starblanket, Monique Deveaux |
Publication status | Published - 2024 |
Keywords
- engaged theory
- Grounded Normative Theory
- Relationality
- Global Justice
- Epistemic justice
- Decolonizing research