•  4
    Teleological Suspension of Development in advance
    Philosophy and Global Affairs. forthcoming.
    The dominant development paradigm, despite its promises of universal prosperity, has functioned as one of coloniality’s most enduring instruments. By positioning Western modernity as the natural endpoint of human progress, it has systematically marginalized alternative ways of knowing, being, and organizing collective life. Drawing on Sylvia Wynter, Lewis Gordon, and Manfred Max-Neef, this article mounts a philosophical challenge to that paradigm. Wynter exposes how development naturalizes a col…Read more
  •  57
    This paper examines the epistemic dimension of dominant group ideologies in order to disrupt oppressive epistemic norms; specifically, the aspiration to ‘neutral’ knowledge, and as a result, what is given the status of knowledge, and who is considered to be producers of said knowledge. It aims to offer evidence that we are under the influence of a longstanding, oppressive, and dominative epistemological system, which leaves us facing clear structural and ideological barriers to epistemic justice…Read more
  • This article offers a critical analysis of Euromodernity through an engagement with the Africana existentialism of Lewis R. Gordon. Drawing on Gordon's recent work Freedom, Justice, and Decolonization (Routledge, 2021) as well as Frantz Fanon, the author argues for the need to decolonize modernity by decoupling Europe and reason, freedom, knowledge, and power. Understanding what it means to be a human being involves an ongoing commitment understanding its relationship to the larger structures of…Read more
  •  60
    Contemporary "Structures" of Racism
    Sartre Studies International 25 (2): 57-76. 2019.
    This paper develops an account of racism as rooted in social structural processes. Using Sartre, I attempt to give a general analysis of what I refer to as the “structures” of our social world, namely the practico-inert, serial collectives, and social groups. I then apply this analysis to expose and elucidate “racist structures,” specifically those that are oftentimes assumed to be ‘race neutral’. By highlighting structures of racial oppression and domination, I aim to justify: 1) the imperative…Read more
  •  66
    Responsibility for Violence
    Radical Philosophy Review 22 (2): 183-208. 2019.
    This paper critically examines violence, and our shared responsibility for it. Drawing on insights from Jean-Paul Sartre, I develop the correlation between scarcity and violence, emphasizing scarcity as agential lack that results from conditions of oppression and domination. In order to develop this correlation between scarcity and violence, I examine the racial dimension of violence in the U.S. Following this analysis, I claim that we all share responsibility for the social structural processes…Read more