Decolonising Resilience: African Voices in Conversation
Lead Research Organisation:
Coventry University
Department Name: Ctr for Trust Peace & Social Relation
Abstract
Resilience is perhaps the most important conceptual addition to international policy making in the last few decades. In placing relations, difference, and context at the heart of its approach, resilience understandings centre the methodologies and approaches of the arts and humanities. This is particularly the case in areas such as humanitarian relief, tackling climate change, and mitigating conflict and pandemics. Here, resilience functions as both an intervention strategy and a marker for the sustainability of efforts undertaken to support populations in alleged need. For this purpose, resilience is streamlined, operationalised, implemented, and measured. These procedures reflect the views and, in fact, requirements of those who are required to work on these projects from the Global North. Notwithstanding attempts to develop participatory methods and inclusive planning, resilience in international practice effectively reproduces historical colonial divides, impairing opportunities to think in more diverse and locally-grounded ways.
While resilience is considered necessary for policy interventions and humanitarian, development or peacebuilding practices, the all-purpose framing presents a narrow approach which silences alternative approaches to and understandings of the concept. Resilience is, in fact, a broad field that touches on economic, social and cultural relations underpinning views and traditions, sometimes challenging and even changing them. The more resilience is implemented by international organisations, the more these views vanish or are strategically ignored. Drawing on ideas of the travel of theories and concepts, this networking project seeks to bring to the fore the work done in negotiating, developing, and translating these concepts and practices by peoples, communities and individuals often considered to be subaltern, whose voices often silenced and marginalised.
An initial step is shifting the emphasis from policy planners and advocates to facilitate discussion and exchange in spaces beyond the traditional policy arenas in the Global North. This project is original not just in 'turning the tables' through starting with the understandings and practices of those often considered recipients of resilience training and capacity-building but also in starting this process through initiating dialogue and exchange of ideas and concerns between institutions, academics and community voices outside the Global North. We plan to initiate this via three interlinked workshops in different policy hubs in Sub-Saharan Africa.
The workshops - in Accra (Ghana), Kigali (Rwanda), and Juba (South Sudan) - will apply a particular lens of scrutiny on resilience to interrogate its meaning and collect and discuss understandings and approaches towards it. These lenses are understandings of indigeneity and local knowledge (Accra), autonomy and innovation (Kigali), and civil society and development (Juba). The networking project aims to enable the initiation of a scholarly community on resilience across Sub-Saharan Africa that gives an alternative forum for developing understandings and potentially questions the contemporary dominant rendering of resilience and thereby make visible alternative approaches to and understandings of resilience.
The project will significantly contribute to expanding and problematising the corpus of scholarly and policy-related knowledge on 'varieties of resilience' (Joseph) or 'complexity governance' (Chandler). It attempts to interrogate the intellectual space resilience may be able to provide for furthering debates about community approaches to change and innovation beyond a simplistic view of managing societal and individual development in the given liberal trajectories. Outcomes and outputs of the project will focus on making a scholarly contribution questioning hierarchical, post-colonial relations towards mutual intellectual explorations of the conceptual space resilience has opened.
While resilience is considered necessary for policy interventions and humanitarian, development or peacebuilding practices, the all-purpose framing presents a narrow approach which silences alternative approaches to and understandings of the concept. Resilience is, in fact, a broad field that touches on economic, social and cultural relations underpinning views and traditions, sometimes challenging and even changing them. The more resilience is implemented by international organisations, the more these views vanish or are strategically ignored. Drawing on ideas of the travel of theories and concepts, this networking project seeks to bring to the fore the work done in negotiating, developing, and translating these concepts and practices by peoples, communities and individuals often considered to be subaltern, whose voices often silenced and marginalised.
An initial step is shifting the emphasis from policy planners and advocates to facilitate discussion and exchange in spaces beyond the traditional policy arenas in the Global North. This project is original not just in 'turning the tables' through starting with the understandings and practices of those often considered recipients of resilience training and capacity-building but also in starting this process through initiating dialogue and exchange of ideas and concerns between institutions, academics and community voices outside the Global North. We plan to initiate this via three interlinked workshops in different policy hubs in Sub-Saharan Africa.
The workshops - in Accra (Ghana), Kigali (Rwanda), and Juba (South Sudan) - will apply a particular lens of scrutiny on resilience to interrogate its meaning and collect and discuss understandings and approaches towards it. These lenses are understandings of indigeneity and local knowledge (Accra), autonomy and innovation (Kigali), and civil society and development (Juba). The networking project aims to enable the initiation of a scholarly community on resilience across Sub-Saharan Africa that gives an alternative forum for developing understandings and potentially questions the contemporary dominant rendering of resilience and thereby make visible alternative approaches to and understandings of resilience.
The project will significantly contribute to expanding and problematising the corpus of scholarly and policy-related knowledge on 'varieties of resilience' (Joseph) or 'complexity governance' (Chandler). It attempts to interrogate the intellectual space resilience may be able to provide for furthering debates about community approaches to change and innovation beyond a simplistic view of managing societal and individual development in the given liberal trajectories. Outcomes and outputs of the project will focus on making a scholarly contribution questioning hierarchical, post-colonial relations towards mutual intellectual explorations of the conceptual space resilience has opened.
Publications

Amponsah C
(2024)
Neo-Colonial Subjectivities in Resilience Praxis and the Urgency to Think 'Beyond Inclusion'
in E-International Relations

Chandler D
(2024)
Resilience Governance: A New Form of Colonialism in the Global South
in E-International Relations

Chandler D
(2024)
Decolonising Resilience: Rethinking 'Local Knowledge', Opacity and Coloniality
in E-International Relations

Pospisil J
(2025)
Opinion - Resilience and the Preparation of the Liberal Subject
in E-International Relations
Description | One of the first main findings that has emerged from our work is that resilience seems to be a confusing category. In terms of traditional international policy discourses, resilience is hard to pin down. While humanitarian and development discussions assume the independence of the recipients, resilience undermines or works outside of liberal understandings of equality and universalist understandings of capacities and capabilities. Resilience is also hard to pin down in the more specialist policy and academic literature. In some writings, resilience is used in a more traditional sense, to indicate modes of coping and "bouncing back" to maintain coherence and structure. However, contemporary forms of resilience seem to be all about "bouncing forward", using crises to seek transformative and forward-looking opportunities. |
Exploitation Route | We had exchange with World Bank and IOM already on policy take up on our findings. We will also look for follow-up funding to maintain and expand the decolonising resilience research network to generate stronger impact. |
Sectors | Communities and Social Services/Policy Environment Government Democracy and Justice |
Description | Project collaboration |
Organisation | University of Westminster |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Joint planning of the project, formal invitation of Univ Westminster as a partner, contracting Univ Westminster as a partner |
Collaborator Contribution | Planning and participation in workshops, planning of follow-up funding, two publications so far |
Impact | two publications by D Chandler (listed), active planning and participation in workshops |
Start Year | 2024 |
Description | Workshop collaboration |
Organisation | University of Ghana |
Country | Ghana |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Outreach to jointly organise a workshop at the University of Ghana, travel to Accra, implementation of workshop there |
Collaborator Contribution | Organised the workshop at the University of Ghana, participated in follow-up workshop at the University of Juba |
Impact | jointly organised workshop |
Start Year | 2024 |
Description | Workshop collaboration |
Organisation | University of Juba |
Country | South Sudan |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Co-organisation and travel to workshop in Juba / South Sudan at University of Juba, joint publication with University of Juba staff |
Collaborator Contribution | Organisation of workshop at University of Juba, travel and participation to Workshop in Accra / Ghana |
Impact | jointly organised workshop, one co-authored publication |
Start Year | 2024 |