Decolonization has been repurposed from a historical process into a portable moral grammar that automatically classifies actors as 'oppressor' or 'oppressed' and supplies an immediate political verdict. The script short‑circuits empirical inquiry by prioritizing categorical identity and moral symmetry over contextual, legal or historical complexity.
— If decolonization functions as a universal interpretive script, it reshapes campus politics, foreign‑policy argumentation, and media framing—making rapid moralization more likely and complicating democratic deliberation.
Caroline Sutton
2026.03.29
85% relevant
The article uses the Chagos/Diego Garcia case to illustrate how decolonization claims operate as recurring political scripts—mobilizing domestic constituencies, reshaping national narratives, and producing international friction between former metropoles and allies (UK, US).
Zineb Riboua
2026.01.12
100% relevant
Article cites post‑October 7 university protests, slogans like 'decolonization is not a metaphor' and calls to 'globalize the Intifada' as evidence that the frame is being used as a universal moral template.
← Back to All Ideas