1. Introduction
2. Political Theory
3. Political Behavior
4. Comparative Politics
5. International Relations
6. Conclusion
Bibliography
Robbie Shilliam is Professor of International Relations at Johns Hopkins University. His last book, Race and the Undeserving Poor, was listed in The Times newspaper's "twelve anti-racism books everybody should read" in 2020.
"Decolonizing Politics is a necessary book as it peels
back the Western assumptions about politics and political life.
This is a vital text for all students of political studies."
Anthony Bogues, Brown University
"This is the kind of book that unlocks doors in people's
minds. Most of all, it brings new energy to the urgent quest, the
world over, to challenge Western dominance of the social sciences
and humanities."
Amy Niang, University of the Witwatersrand
"In Decolonizing Politics, Shilliam provides a
brilliant, erudite but also accessible and enjoyable guide to how
to de-center the production of our knowledge about politics. This
is a 'must read' for all students of Political Science, Political
Theory and International Relations."
Kimberly Hutchings, Queen Mary University of London
"Written with spunk and verve, this book is the refreshing
and exciting introduction that the discipline of political science
has been waiting for! While revealing the imperial, racial,
gendered, and class hierarchies that shaped the intellectual roots
of the discipline's core subfields and organizing concepts, the
book introduces readers to anticolonial thinkers from the margins
and borderlands, who offer compelling alternative routes to
reimagining the human, the citizen, the path to development, and
the causes of war and peace."
Catherine Lu, McGill University
"This is a vital text for anyone committed to teaching
Politics with honesty and rigour. Shilliam re-engages faithfully
with canonical figures, such as Kant and Aristotle, confronting the
constitutive dehumanising exclusions which have since been
airbrushed from their theories, before introducing routes to repair
by way of thinkers, such as Wynter and Anzaldua, who imagine
humanity without exclusions."
Lisa Tilley, Birkbeck, University of London
"Political Science needs to be decolonized and Robbie Shilliam
has done it. Crisp, clear and accessible, this book exceeds the
ambition of a conventional textbook by developing and applying a
decolonial method of reading across the discipline's
subfields."
David L. Blaney, Macalester College
"In Decolonizing Politics, Robbie Shilliam
challenges Political Science to critically examine the colonial and
racist logics at the foundations of the discipline. It may be an
introductory text aimed at undergraduates, but I wish all
mainstream political scientists dared to engage with its
premise."
Times Higher Education
"A valuable contribution to academic life."
Ethnic and Racial Studies
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |