TY - JOUR
T1 - Decolonising the aftermath of death in UK contexts: theoretical approaches, institutional ‘constraints’, and everyday experiences
AU - Hamilton, Sukh
AU - Keenan, Joseph
AU - Pusey, Laura
AU - Ribben Mccarthy, Jane
AU - Stedmon, Jaqui
AU - Taylor, Foluke
PY - 2025/2/18
Y1 - 2025/2/18
N2 - Innovative decolonising work always entails going beyond diversity, but has only recently been raised in relation to ‘bereavement studies’. This paper explores what it may entail to ‘decolonise’ death and its continuing aftermath in the lives of the living. In the UK, documented experiences of racialised inequalities and discrimination have clearly evidenced the pervasiveness of institutional racism across many key areas of life. In the bereavement sector specifically, the paucity of appropriate support for minoritised ethnic populations was identified as a central issue in the 2022 UK Bereavement Commission Report, with services poorly placed to respond. Addressing these concerns raises profound challenges associated with the whiteness of coloniality/modernity, onto-epistemological in/justice, and institutional power constraints. Attending with openness to lived experience offers a possibility for social justice that may benefit all in responding to the aftermath of death. Following the diverse panel convened under this title for the CDAS conference 2023, we build in a somewhat ‘unruly’ fashion on our continuing conversations, asking whether ‘decolonising’ might demand reconsideration of how, as well as what, we write. Hoping to encourage dialogue between scholars, practitioners and lived experience, we offer no firm conclusions but seek to open new spaces to address the ‘deadly silence’ that currently predominates.
AB - Innovative decolonising work always entails going beyond diversity, but has only recently been raised in relation to ‘bereavement studies’. This paper explores what it may entail to ‘decolonise’ death and its continuing aftermath in the lives of the living. In the UK, documented experiences of racialised inequalities and discrimination have clearly evidenced the pervasiveness of institutional racism across many key areas of life. In the bereavement sector specifically, the paucity of appropriate support for minoritised ethnic populations was identified as a central issue in the 2022 UK Bereavement Commission Report, with services poorly placed to respond. Addressing these concerns raises profound challenges associated with the whiteness of coloniality/modernity, onto-epistemological in/justice, and institutional power constraints. Attending with openness to lived experience offers a possibility for social justice that may benefit all in responding to the aftermath of death. Following the diverse panel convened under this title for the CDAS conference 2023, we build in a somewhat ‘unruly’ fashion on our continuing conversations, asking whether ‘decolonising’ might demand reconsideration of how, as well as what, we write. Hoping to encourage dialogue between scholars, practitioners and lived experience, we offer no firm conclusions but seek to open new spaces to address the ‘deadly silence’ that currently predominates.
KW - Decolonising
KW - death and its aftermath
KW - bereavement and grief
KW - racism in the UK
KW - whiteness
U2 - 10.1080/13576275.2025.2458588
DO - 10.1080/13576275.2025.2458588
M3 - Article
SN - 1357-6275
JO - Mortality: Promoting the Interdisciplinary Study of Death and Dying
JF - Mortality: Promoting the Interdisciplinary Study of Death and Dying
ER -