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Interdependence and Intersections

Thu, April 9, 2:15 to 3:45pm PDT (2:15 to 3:45pm PDT), JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 4th Floor, Diamond 6

Abstract

This panel explores the challenges and affordances of intercultural and intersectional collaborations among African and Latin American scholars in teacher education. Through dialogue across diverse linguistic, cultural, and institutional contexts, presenters examine how colonialism, ableism, and epistemic hierarchies shape global educational partnerships. Discussions illuminate how Yoruba and Wayuu epistemologies and language ideologies reveal both the tensions and transformative possibilities of co-creating knowledge across continents. By critically engaging the persistence of epistemic imperialism, the panel advances visions of reciprocal, community-engaged research and pedagogy that honor multiple ways of knowing. Collectively, participants reimagine global teacher education as a site of interdependence, relational accountability, and the unforgetting of suppressed intellectual traditions.

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