Postcolonial theory, nursing knowledge, and the development of emancipatory knowing.

Deanna Bickford
Author Information
  1. Deanna Bickford: College of Nursing, University of Saskatchewan, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada.

Abstract

Nurses must assume a leadership role in confronting inequitable access to health care. This imperative is realizable through contributions to the knowledge of the discipline, reflecting on the profession's mandate for social justice and elimination of health inequities, as well as embracing the diversity of nursing's fundamental patterns of knowing. Emancipatory knowing involves critically examining social, political, and institutional structures to uncover social injustices and inequities and disrupt the status quo, as well as asking critical questions. Postcolonial theory, aligned with these foundational principles, can be used to answer such critical questions, thus contributing to the advancement of disciplinary knowledge.

MeSH Term

Colonialism
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Health Services Accessibility
Healthcare Disparities
Human Rights
Humans
Leadership
Models, Nursing
Nurse's Role
Nursing Theory
Philosophy, Nursing
Social Justice

Word Cloud

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