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Indaba - A Critical Community Psychology Global Podcast

  • Imaginings & Practice: Decolonial South African Community Psychology (Critical Response - Part 2)

    19 MAR 2024 · In this critical response episode, scholars from various countries and backgrounds engage in a conversation about knowledge production in South Africa. The participants include Natalie Kivell, Michelle Fine, Elizabeth Brunet, Tiffeny Jiménez, Garth Stevens, and Rejane. They discuss critical psychology, power dynamics, and the importance of local context and spirituality in their work. The tension between global North and South knowledges is a central theme, and the scholars emphasize the need for humility and appreciation of different perspectives when engaging with knowledge from different regions. They stress the importance of recognizing the humanity of the communities they work with and going beyond buzzwords to address social issues. Power dynamics within academic institutions are discussed, as well as the responsibility of researchers to acknowledge historical legacies of violence and oppression. The scholars reflect on their own positionality and the challenges of understanding and addressing inequalities.In the transnational and decolonial aspects of community psychology, the participants explore how concepts travel across contexts and regions. They advocate for collaborative and engaged research and activism to dismantle colonial legacies and promote equity. The podcast concludes with discussions on promoting knowledge sharing and equity within academia. The scholars advocate for removing ego and creating communal spaces for knowledge-sharing. They emphasize the need for continuous interrogation of one's position and impact in academia. Overall, the episode highlights the complexities of knowledge production, power dynamics, and the importance of embracing diverse perspectives to create meaningful change in academia and society. The scholars encourage ongoing dialogue and exploration of these themes to foster equitable and inclusive societies. **Stay Engaged with Indaba!** Join us on this journey of exploration and discovery by subscribing to Indaba for future thought-provoking episodes. Don't miss out on the latest insights and discussions that shape our understanding of community psychology practice and be sure to tune in to the response episode for deeper insights into the conversations shared here. Visit https://internationalcommunitypsychology.com/indaba/ to access additional resources, transcripts, translations in French and Spanish, and further information related to the topics covered in this episode. Thank you for being a part of the Indaba community. Your support fuels our commitment to meaningful change and collective learning.
    1h 25m 37s
  • Imaginings & Practice: Decolonial South African Community Psychology (Storytelling - Part 1)

    9 MAR 2024 · In episode 6 the conversation revolves around community psychology in South Africa, tracing the different eras it has gone through, from anti-apartheid and anti-colonial eras to the current focus on decoloniality and socio-political structures.  South African community psychology has contributed to global community psychology by broadening critique, challenging oppressive practices, and emphasizing cultural and indigenous perspectives.  In this conversation Garth Stevens and Rejane Williams weave together dialogues with guests Floretta Boonzaier, Peace Kiguwa, Kopano Ratele, and Mohammed Seedat as they explore the different layers and facets of decolonial imaginations and praxis in South African Community Psychology including the importance of understanding violence in all its forms and the dynamics of power, ideology, and identity in social change and Mohammed shares insights from the Institute for Social and Health Sciences, which disrupts biomedical traditions and engages in community-based research from marginalized spaces. Garth and Rejane along with their panel of guests explore the limitations and challenges of community psychology in South Africa. Floretta highlights the challenge of translating decolonial discourse into practice and the relevance of critical approaches in addressing issues like gender-based violence and trauma. Kopano emphasizes the influence of neoliberal capitalism on psychology and the need for psychologists to closely engage with communities and counteract its negative effects. Peace emphasizes the critical analysis of power and ideology within psychology and the need for self-reflection in community psychology. They stress the importance of questioning conceptualizations of community and avoiding unintentional harm. The conversation concludes with a focus on countering individualism and advocating for vibrant communities through various mediums. Florieta and Peace discuss an agenda for the radical resurgence of critical community psychology in South Africa. They emphasize the decolonial perspective, understanding ongoing colonization, countering epistemic violence, and holding complexity in understanding people's lives. Ethical practice, representation of marginalized communities, and opening spaces for desire, resistance, pleasure, and radical forms of help are also highlighted. Peace brings in the perspective of Black and African feminist theorizing, exploring the role of emotion and affect in critical community practice. They discuss subjectification, the politics of rage and love, and the complexities of social fragmentation. Peace also explores the affective dimensions within institutions and the importance of confronting oneself and engaging with decolonization in the education space.  **Stay Engaged with Indaba!** Join us on this journey of exploration and discovery by subscribing to Indaba for future thought-provoking episodes. Don't miss out on the latest insights and discussions that shape our understanding of community psychology practice and be sure to tune in to the response episode for deeper insights into the conversations shared here. Visit https://internationalcommunitypsychology.com/indaba/ to access additional resources, transcripts, translations in French and Spanish, and further information related to the topics covered in this episode. Thank you for being a part of the Indaba community. Your support fuels our commitment to meaningful change and collective learning.
    1h 21m 48s
  • Praxical Violence: A Critical Analysis of Social Policies for Poverty Intervention (CHILE - pt2)

    1 FEB 2024 · In this "Chile Critical Response” episode, host Natalie Kivell engages in a conversation with a diverse group of speakers, including Sam Keast, Roshani, Tiffeny Jiménez, and Juan-Camilo Riaño-Rodriguez focusing on critical community psychology in the Indonesian context, as presented by Monica Madyaningrum, Dicky Pelupessy, and Jony Yulianto. Participants discuss the importance of cultivating historically and culturally situated knowledge in community psychology work. They share their experiences working within formal institutions that may not fully recognize or value community-based research. Ethics, relationality, and the interlinking of personal and community identities in research engagement are highlighted as central to meaningful work with communities. The episode offers insights into the struggles faced by community psychologists in Indonesia and other places where Western psychology dominates the discourse. It emphasizes the need to rethink and reimagine psychology as a field that values diverse voices and alternative methodologies to address social and historical injustices. The conversation emphasizes collaborative efforts to promote critical community psychology and advocate for social justice in Indonesia and beyond. Overall, the episode showcases the participants' critical and reflexive engagement with the podcast's themes, promoting solidarity and collaboration in the field.
    1h 6s
  • Praxical Violence: A Critical Analysis of Social Policies for Poverty Intervention (CHILE - pt1)

    9 JAN 2024 · In this episode of "Praxical violence and praxical integrity: A critical analysis of social policies for poverty intervention," hosts Marianne Daher, Antonia Rosati, and María José Campero delve into their research project on praxical violence in public policies for poverty intervention in Chile. The hosts, who are community psychologists, discuss the concept of praxical violence as a specific form of violence that occurs within social programs, involving institutional framework, intervention agents and participants. The hosts aimed to shed light on the complexities and challenges surrounding social programs and the impact that praxical violence has on institutions, participants and intervention agents. They also reflect on the need for collective effort to develop praxical integrity in social programs, working towards creating more symmetrical and empowering interventions. Praxical violence is defined as the asymmetrical exercise of power by a subject (institutional framework, intervention agents, or participants) in symbolic and practical dimensions, which targets an object (intervention agent or participant), resulting in a relationship that is detrimental to the actors involved and to the aims of the public policy and social intervention (Daher et al., 2023). The discussion focuses on the experiences of participants and intervention agents within the institutional framework. Participants face violence through a macro-numerical and objectifying logic of public policy, feeling used without receiving the intended interventions. Judgment, accusations of lying, and the control of family dynamics contribute to the violence. Methodological rigidity, contradictions, and exclusion based on education or income perpetuate dependency. Intervention agents may exert symbolic violence by trivializing participants' lives or denigrating their conditions. Praxical violence includes distant treatment, derogatory references, and poor implementation of interventions. Participants also exhibit violence towards agents, themselves, and other participants through resistance, poor interactional practices, and criticism. To overcome praxical violence, the hosts propose praxical integrity which is defined as the exercise of symmetrical power, through symbolic approaches and practical intervention actions, related to the institutional framework and the bond between intervention agent and participant, establishing a relationship that is nourishing to the actors involved and the aims of the public policy and social intervention (Daher et al., 2023). This exercise considers approaches within the institutional framework, such as rights-guarantee, participatory, situated, critical, and caring approaches. Strengthening the bond between agents and participants through empathy, trust, and mutual responsibility is crucial. Empowering participants, promoting awareness and reflexivity, and fostering dignity and humanization are essential strategies. The hosts emphasize the need to address cases of violence seriously, while acknowledging the role of the community in recognizing and transforming power relations. The hosts' research project aims to contribute to a larger transformation in social programs, promoting positive change and empowering vulnerable individuals.
    1h 18s
  • Indigenous Ways of Knowing, Being, and Healing: A Critical Reflection (pt2)

    12 DEC 2023 · In this second of two episodes on Indigenous ways of knowing, being, and healing hosts Natalie Kivell and Ramy Barhouche engage in a powerful conversation with a diverse group of guests: Hana Masud, Rejane Williams, Ann Marie Beals, Amy Smoke, and Marika Handfield. Guests were invited to listen to part 1, and join us in this dialogue to further our collective understanding and imaginations about Indigenous reclamation and resistance. This episode covers a range of topics, including resistance as healing, the impacts of colonialism and capitalism, the fight for Indigenous sovereignty and land reclamation, denial of colonialism, the challenges of raising awareness, and the importance of safe spaces and language in resistance. We explore the role of non-Indigenous allies in awareness-raising work and the emotional labor involved in resisting oppression. The guests candidly reflect on the exhaustion and frustration within the ongoing struggle. The episode amplifies Indigenous movements for, survival and freedom, and the refusal to be marginalized. It emphasizes intergenerational healing, breaking cycles of trauma, and the ongoing reclamation of Indigenous languages, cultures, and practices. We encourage listeners and transcript readers to support Indigenous communities in these journeys for justice, recognition, self-determination, and liberation from Palestine, to Turtle Island, to South Africa and in and for all colonized lands. **Stay Engaged with Indaba!** Join us on this journey of exploration and discovery by subscribing to Indaba for future thought-provoking episodes. Don't miss out on the latest insights and discussions that shape our understanding of community psychology practice and be sure to tune in to the response episode for deeper insights into the conversations shared here. Visit https://internationalcommunitypsychology.com/indaba/ to access additional resources, transcripts, translations in French and Spanish, and further information related to the topics covered in this episode. Thank you for being a part of the Indaba community. Your support fuels our commitment to meaningful change and collective learning.
    1h 17m 14s
  • Indigenous Ways of Knowing, Being, and Healing: Storytelling (pt1)

    5 DEC 2023 · In this first of two episodes exploring Indigenous ways of knowing, being, and healing: Christopher Sonn and Ramy Barhouche engage in a deep dialogue with guests Karen Jackson (KJ), Puleng Segalo, Bangishimo, and Amy Smoke exploring Indigenous ways of knowing, being, and healing in a conversation touching on historical trauma, colonization, and the importance of cultural revitalization, sovereignty and emphasizing community-based healing This episode challenges individualistic approaches while underscoring the power of ceremony, storytelling, and cultural practices as resistance and the guests’ insights inspire solidarity for justice, recognition, and self-determination for Indigneous people globally in a dialogue showcasing Indigenous strength in reclaiming culture and identity and urging support for just and inclusive societies driven by understanding and action. **Stay Engaged with Indaba!** Join us on this journey of exploration and discovery by subscribing to Indaba for future thought-provoking episodes. Don't miss out on the latest insights and discussions that shape our understanding of community psychology practice and be sure to tune in to the response episode for deeper insights into the conversations shared here. Visit https://internationalcommunitypsychology.com/indaba/ to access additional resources, transcripts, translations in French and Spanish, and further information related to the topics covered in this episode. Thank you for being a part of the Indaba community. Your support fuels our commitment to meaningful change and collective learning.
    1h 32m 23s
  • Hosts and Dreams

    26 NOV 2023 · Welcome to our inaugural episode of Indaba. This podcast is a project of collective global love built with our global network of scholars, activists, community practitioners, and friends rooted in a Critical Community Psychology, and a shared goal of furthering our capacity to engage in critical, decolonial and action-oriented research and practice in our everyday work and life. As a co-imagined podcast there are a number of hosts and collaborators that you will hear from through the season, and we offer this episode as our introduction to you. With partners in Australia Chris Sonn, Roshani Jayawardana, Rama Agung-Igusti, and Sam Keast, in Canada, Natalie Kivell, Ramy Barhouche, Marika Handfield, and Elizabeth Brunet, in Chile, Marianne Daher, Antonia Rosati, and Maria Jose Campero, in South Africa Garth Stevens, and Rejane Williams, and in Indonesia Monica Madyaningrum. In this first episode, you’ll find a number of us in a park in Naples Italy at the International Conference for Community Psychology, a moment and dialogue that we couldn’t help but smile, laugh, and selfie our way through as we found ourselves for the first time in the same timezone. In this ‘get to know us’ episode we invite you into our collective of resistance, learning, and connection. We begin with Chris and Garth taking us through our podcast name: Why ‘Indaba’ and then you’ll hear from many of us about how we see this project and podcast taking shape, and finally we each introduce ourselves to you as listeners and transcript readers. Consider this episode a roadmap – to who we are, of what you can expect, and with different pathways into and through this season. After this episode we present five pairs of episodes, each pair exploring a particular context of everyday praxis, beginning with a contextually grounded storytelling episode drawing on the experiences of our guests, and followed by a critical reflection dialogue with members of our global collective drawing insights into the local contexts of South Africa, Indonesia, Chile, Australia, Palestine, and Canada. Over this season you’ll hear from many of us as hosts, and sometimes as guests as the topics, contexts, and regions, shift through our episodes. Hosts/Guests: Natalie Kivell, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada Ramy Barhouche, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada Chris Sonn, Victoria University, Australia Roshani Jayawardana, Victoria University, Australia Rama Agung-Igusti, Victoria University, Australia Sam Keast, Victoria University, Australia Marika Handfield, University du Quebec A Montreal, Canada Elizabeth Brunet, University du Quebec A Montreal, Canada Marianne Daher, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Antonia Rosati, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Maria Jose Campero, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Garth Stevens, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa Rejane Williams, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa Monica Madyaningrum, Sanata Dharma University, Indonesia
    48m 44s

Indaba is a global podcast that brings together scholars, practitioners, and activists as we re-imagine and reconstruct how we relate to and live in the world. Rooted in a Critical...

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Indaba is a global podcast that brings together scholars, practitioners, and activists as we re-imagine and reconstruct how we relate to and live in the world.

Rooted in a Critical Community psychology, an interdisciplinary social science driven by social justice and decolonial values, we explore methodological, theoretical, and practical knowledge that informs our social change practice. Indaba is a South African Indigenous term for a meeting and through this show we foster a coming together to share and engage with ideas with a collective of voices from around the world.

Curated into five pairs of episodes exploring our everyday praxis, each beginning with a contextually grounded storytelling episode followed by a critical reflection dialogue with members of our global collective including South Africa, Indonesia, Chile, Australia, Palestine, and Canada.

The show is created by a global network of supporters including faculty partners Natalie Kivell, Christopher Sonn, Marianne Daher Gray, Monica Madyaningrum, Garth Stevens, and Manuel Riemer and a Grad student collective including Ramy Barhouche, Rejane Williams, Marika Handfield, Rama Agung-Igusti, Roshani Jayawardana, Antonia Rosati, María José Campero, Elizabeth Brunet, and Sam Keast with audio production by Andre Goulet and Rob Rousseau with consultation from Nashwa Khan and graphic art by melisse Watson.

In-kind and financial support for Indaba comes courtesy of the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, the Psychological Society of South Africa, Victoria University of Melbourne Australia, The Centre for Community Research, Learning, and Action and Office of Research Services at Wilfrid Laurier University, in Ontario and the Society for Community Research and Action.
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