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    Why Opposites Don’t Always Attract: Reflections on Binaries and Their Implications for Decolonising Development Communications and Education.


    Dillon, Eilish (2021) Why Opposites Don’t Always Attract: Reflections on Binaries and Their Implications for Decolonising Development Communications and Education. Development Education and Social Justice, 33. ISSN 1573-1723

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    Abstract

    In this article, I argue that addressing binaries is an important aspect of decolonising development communication and development education (DE). I draw on some key points emerging in research I am currently conducting on ethical communications among international development NGOs in Ireland. Though critique of binaries in development education is often focused on the binaries of ‘North-South’ or ‘local-global’, in this article I address other binaries common to development education and communications such as ‘means and end’, ‘real and not real’, ‘positive vs negative’ and ‘us and them’. Exploring their implications, I argue that binary thinking doesn’t only limit our field of vision but it distorts it, often leading to damaging consequences. This article is not designed to present a full discussion of binaries but to highlight some of the processes at play in relation to them. The hope is that it may encourage us to critically reflect on the effects of what we say and the stories we use in global education as well as in development communications.

    Item Type: Article
    Additional Information: Cite as: DILLON, E. 2021. WHY OPPOSITES DON’T ALWAYS ATTRACT: REFLECTIONS ON BINARIES AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS FOR DECOLONISING DEVELOPMENT COMMUNICATIONS AND EDUCATION.
    Keywords: Development Communication; Development Education; Decolonising Development; Binaries; Development Discourses; and Representations;
    Academic Unit: Faculty of Social Sciences > International Development
    Item ID: 17883
    Depositing User: Eilish Dillon
    Date Deposited: 23 Nov 2023 14:27
    Journal or Publication Title: Development Education and Social Justice
    Publisher: Elsevier
    Refereed: Yes
    URI:
    Use Licence: This item is available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike Licence (CC BY-NC-SA). Details of this licence are available here

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