The founding statement of the field. Connell argues that mainstream social science treats the metropole as the place where theory is made and the periphery as the place where data is collected — and shows, through encounters with thinkers from Africa, Iran, India, Latin America and Australia, that the South theorises with equal rigour and often greater relevance. The single best entry point to the whole debate.
Decolonising Development Knowledge
Whose evidence counts, who gets to theorise, and what localisation actually demands — a reading list on epistemic justice in development.
Development claims to be evidence-based, but the question of whose evidence counts is rarely asked out loud. The methods that confer credibility — the peer-reviewed journal, the randomised trial, the donor-commissioned evaluation — were built in the global North and overwhelmingly remain controlled there. People in the South are studied, surveyed, and "captured" in datasets far more often than they are cited as theorists of their own condition. Decolonising development knowledge starts from that asymmetry and asks what it would take to undo it.
The first cluster of texts here is the theoretical backbone: Connell's argument that the South produces theory and not merely data; Santos on cognitive injustice and epistemicide; Smith on research as a tool that has long been done to Indigenous and colonised peoples rather than with them. The middle sections turn to the critique of "development" itself as a discourse, and to the uncomfortably practical questions — about authorship, statistics, and the "white gaze" — that decide whose account of a problem becomes the official one. The final section is for practitioners living inside the localisation and decolonising-aid debate, where fine words about shifting power keep colliding with funding structures that have barely moved.
New to the field? Start with Connell and the Peace Direct report. Already convinced and looking for sharper tools? Go to Santos, Tuck & Yang, and Pailey — they will complicate any easy story you are telling yourself.
Foundations: Southern Theory & Epistemic Justice
The texts that reframe the global South as a site of theory production, not just a source of raw data for Northern analysis.
Santos coins the vocabulary much of this conversation now runs on: "cognitive injustice" and "epistemicide" — the systematic killing-off of non-Western ways of knowing. His core claim is blunt and hard to escape: there is no global social justice without global cognitive justice. Dense, but the conceptual payoff is worth the effort.
For many communities, Smith writes, "research" is one of the dirtiest words in the colonial vocabulary. This book reads research itself as an instrument of empire and sets out an agenda for Indigenous-led inquiry that returns control over questions, methods, and benefit to the researched. Indispensable for anyone designing fieldwork in a post-colonial setting.
"Development" as Discourse
The critical tradition that treats development not as a neutral project but as a way of representing — and governing — the global South.
Escobar's argument is that post-war development discourse created the Third World as an object to be managed — that "the poor" and "the underdeveloped" are categories produced by experts, not facts found in the field. A foundational post-development text and a sharp reminder that how we name a problem already presumes who is qualified to solve it.
The classic political-economy account of underdevelopment as something actively produced by imperial extraction, not a natural starting condition that aid arrives to fix. Rodney's framing — that Africa developed Europe at the same rate Europe underdeveloped Africa — still anchors structural critiques of the aid relationship fifty years on. The Verso edition carries a foreword by Angela Davis.
Ngũgĩ's essays make the case that colonialism's deepest work was done on language and consciousness, not just territory and economy. For knowledge-workers in development the lesson is uncomfortable: a sector that thinks, reports, and theorises almost entirely in English has already made a choice about whose mind counts. Short, vivid, and quietly radical.
The essential corrective to a now-fashionable word. Tuck and Yang warn that turning "decolonisation" into a loose metaphor for any progressive reform lets institutions perform virtue while changing nothing material. Read it before you put "decolonise" in a grant proposal — it will make you more precise about what you are actually committing to.
Whose Evidence Counts
On authorship, statistics, and the gaze — the everyday mechanics that decide whose account of a problem becomes official.
Pailey names the implicit standard against which development still measures progress: a white, Northern observer for whom the South is a site of deficiency. Originally a Development Studies Association keynote, the essay argues that decolonial scholarship means turning that gaze around — and changing who designs, leads, and authors the research. A modern landmark, and very teachable.
A reminder that the "hard data" of development is itself political and often shaky. Jerven opens the black box of African statistical offices to show how chronic underfunding and methodological shortcuts produce GDP and poverty figures that are then treated as ground truth by donors and rankings. Essential for anyone who builds arguments on national statistics.
An open-access teaching resource that does quiet decolonial work by simply making it easy to cite thinkers and concepts from beyond the Western canon. Use it to find Southern theorists for a syllabus, or to check whether your reading list is as global as your subject claims to be. A practical antidote to citation monocultures.
Localisation & Decolonising Aid in Practice
Where the theory meets the funding structures — the live, unresolved fight over who leads and who gets paid.
Built from a global consultation with 158 activists, practitioners and academics, this report puts structural racism and the "white saviour" reflex at the centre of the aid critique — and lists concrete changes to recruitment, funding, communications, and research. The most accessible practitioner-facing statement of the decolonising-aid agenda, and a good companion to the #ShiftThePower movement.
A cross-sector effort, born in 2020, that interrogates the very purpose and power of the international NGO rather than just tweaking its programmes. RINGO's prototypes — on funding, accountability, and a Southern-led decolonising advisory community — are where the abstract call to "shift the power" is being turned into operating models. Follow it to see what institutional decolonisation looks like in practice.
The official statement of the headline localisation commitment: at least 25% of humanitarian funding "as directly as possible" to local and national actors. Read it alongside the critiques — definitions of "local" are contested and the target has repeatedly slipped — to see exactly where rhetoric about shifting power meets the slow reality of donor systems.
ImpactMojo Editorial (2026). "Decolonising Development Knowledge." ImpactMojo Deep Dives. Retrieved from https://impactmojo.in/DeepDives/decolonising-development-knowledge.html
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