Racism in Higher Education

Research, reports and resources highlighting and offering guidance to tackle racism in HE.

Racism in Higher Education research

Anti-Racism in Higher Education

Curriculum whiteness research & resources

  • Finger/ Jezebel (2015)[Analysis of Texan school textbooks' treatment of slavery. Highlights minimization of it].
  • Forstorp, P. (2008). Who's colonizing who? The knowledge society thesis and the global challenges of higher education. Studies in Philosophy and Education, 27(4), 227-236 - [The concepts of 'globalization' and 'knowledge society' are expressions of neo-colonialism and assume a Eurocentric bias. Alongside increasing numbers of students from non-western countries attending higher education in the West, the growth of higher education in China and India have started to see a process of 'outknowing of the West' leading to the question 'Who is colonizing who?']
  • Henrich, J., Heine, S. J., & Norenzayan, A. (2010). The weirdest people in the world? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 33(2–3), 61–83- Content analysis of popular social science papers highlighting samples are predominately White & Western].
  • UCL Collective (2015). 8 reasons the curriculum is white [Outlines the issue of  'race' as an ideologically constructed social phenomenon and offers eight answers to the question: why is the curriculum white?].
  • Long, L. (working paper). 'Decolonizing' police education? Exploring anti-racist approaches to police education and professional development. [Extract: "This paper explores the potential for the anti-racist, decolonizing education agenda to extend to other White institutions, specifically the police". Please email [email protected]  for a copy].
  • Mowatt, R. A., Floyd, M. F. & Hylton, K. (2017)- A Peoples History of Leisure Studies The Philadelphia Negro as a Foundational Text. International Journal of the Sociology of Leisure, 1, 1, 55-73. [An innovate paper that highlights the hidden Western and Whiteness of foundational texts to Leisures studies and argues instead for the inclusion of The Philadelphia Negro and other texts that not only centre BME people's experiences but also are innovative in other ways. From the text: "Specifically, (1) canonical texts from sociology of Race should be considered for inclusion because they provide insight to the quality of life of populations of color that are not reflected in leisure's canonical texts; (2) provide more accurate and complete characteristics of social history and context in which the classic movements originated and were initiated in to social life; and, (3) offer a considerable argument for the re-evaluation and restructuring of our historical explanation of the field to future generations of professionals" (pg. 70)]. Full paper here.
  • National Union of Students, "Why is my curriculum white?," [film funded by University College London] accessed May 29, 2019,

Decolonial resources and projects specific to other disciplines

General Anti-racism resources and organisations

  • The Runnymede Trust [one of the most important and long-running British anti-racist organizations. Set up in 1968 the organization has campaigned on anti-racism in Britain over the last 50 years. Writers can blog on the website. Particularly useful for analyzing contemporary British policy and its implications for BAME people and also for understanding the overlap between racism and class].