A critical analysis of western environmental knowledge as a neocolonial strategy: The case of Uganda

Article Authors: Aciro, T., Alidri, A., Nuwategeka, E., & Lajul, W. (2025).

Abstract


Abstract
To curb environmental challenges effectively, Western environmental knowledge has been adopted besides indigenous environmental knowledge system in Africa. However, the dualistic nature of knowledge integration, this paper notes, is tinted by unfair power relations where indigenous knowledge is masked by neo-colonial tenets of the West. Neo-colonialism, as argued in this paper, is the attempt of the Western societies to impose their knowledge system to micro-manage the environmental and other affairs in Africa, taking a case study of Uganda. Our central inquiry is why Africa is gradually deviating from indigenous knowledge systems in preference of Western environmental knowledge. Using a critical analytical survey method, this paper argues that there is environmental knowledge neo-colonialism in Africa today characterized by Western identity construction, language dominance, cross-cultural cloning, undermining of indigenous education patterns, academic division of labor, education as an investment, top-down distribution of knowledge, and improper contextualization of knowledge construction and application. This appeals for Africanized production of knowledge to suit the continent’s environmental needs and achieve African epistemic autonomy.

Bibliographical metadata

Publisher Modestum
Volume 4
Issue No. 2
DOI https://doi.org/10.29333/agrenvedu/16722
License This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
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Affiliation

Gulu University