prof.dr. RA (Rosalba) Icaza Garza

Biography

Global Politics, Feminisms and Decoloniality

My research lies at the intersection of global politics, feminisms and decoloniality. The field of global politics analyzes interactions between power and knowledge under conditions of globalization.

The field of feminisms investigates the gendered inequalities in such interactions. Feminisms in plural indicates my long-term interest in the plurality of approaches reflecting and acting upon gendered inequalities across the Global North/South divide.

The field of decoloniality is concerned with modern and colonial structures of power, knowledge, gender, and subject formation and proposes a turn to an epistemic or cognitive South in the reconstitution of a global political society.

Global Politics and Epistemic Justice in Development Studies

Interconnecting these strands, my academic work has generated rigorous societally engaged analyses of global politics and epistemic justice in development studies. Thematically, it reflects my long-term fascination for understanding the productive learning tensions that emerge when communities organize across borders to resist multiple intermeshed oppressions along lines of gender, race/ethnicity, class, age/generation, sexualities, and body capacities. I have conceptualized such responses as ‘social struggles as epistemic struggles’ (Icaza and Vazquez 2013).

Decolonial Feminism

In advancing this intellectual interest, I have contributed to feminist decolonial perspectives by accounting for an epistemic dimension of collective action across borders (Icaza 2010; Icaza and Vazquez 2013; Icaza 2013; Icaza 2015; Icaza 2017; Icaza 2018). Such a perspective was previously only marginally recognized in the fields of international relations (IR) and international development studies.

My research on the epistemologies of affect and the corporeal in social struggles (Icaza 2017, Icaza 2018) has brought it to the forefront. I have identified how modes of knowing and being are produced through experiences of epistemic vulnerability and fragility when encountering and hosting radical difference.

Collaborative Research Methodologies

In advancing a conceptualization of social struggles as epistemic struggles, I developed a collaborative research methodology characterized by its engaged and rigorous non-extractive approach to knowledge cultivation through mutual learning across differences (Icaza 2018; Icaza and Leyva 2019; Icaza, Jong and Rutazibwa 2018). 

Teaching 

At ISS, I have contributed to developing a new area of research-led teaching on epistemic justice, decoloniality, and the politics of knowledge. During the period 2021-2024, I will be the course leader of the following MA-level courses:

1114 Politics of  Modern Development - Decolonising Power

3211 Decolonial Research in the Development Context 

4354 Transitions to Social Justice LAB - Decolonial Reconstitutions 

Societally Embedded and Accountable Research

As well as being deeply engaged in teaching, my research emphasizes strong societal orientation and impact. In 2016, I served on the University of Amsterdam Diversity Commission, set up to investigate the meanings associated with diversity in the existing governance frameworks at UvA. Under the Chairship of Emerita Professor Gloria Wekker my contribution revealed how UvA tended to limit diversity to gender and internationalization. I also pointed out a prevailing demographic understanding of diversity (who is at the university) to the neglect of an epistemic understanding of diversity (what knowledge is produced and taught).

In the collaborative project “We won’t think what we don’t do: Learning from Stories of Solidarity in times of Covid in the City of the Hague” (LEF-SOS; 2020-21) co-lead with Dr Aminata Cairo, I investigate the meanings of solidarity that circulate among marginalized communities in The Hague during and after the COVID-19 “intelligent” lockdown in the Netherlands and the global Black Lives Matter mobilizations. As the research foregrounds active engagement with and accessibility to what has been collectively learned, the outputs are directed to different audiences, including academia, teachers and students, the Den Haag Municipality, local policymakers as well as community and religious centers. 

Collaborations, Coalitions, Relationships

As someone who constantly seeks long-lasting collaborations in the Netherlands and abroad with academic, policy, and activist networks concerned with global justice, equity, and sustainable development, I value the practice of critical self-reflexivity as a basis to respond to and be with others effectively but caringly.

Teacher, Mentor, Woman of Color

As a teacher, and mentor in both undergraduate and postgraduate education in seven different countries I have learned the importance of deep listening, connection, and relation for sustaining long-lasting collaborative work. As a woman of color, I understand my role in academia as an opportunity to honor those who precede me and mentor those who come after me.

Interconnected areas of research:

**I Decolonial thinking and 'the international'**

How can one revisit the modern/colonial character of notions such as region, regionalism, social resistance, and global justice?

My way of working this question has been through the identification of decolonial trajectories in knowledges and cosmovisions that have been actively produced as backward or ‘subaltern’ by hegemonic forms of understanding of 'the international' (including liberalism, Marxism, some feminisms, post-structuralism and the current IR hype on “new materialism”). Post-development, critical pedagogies, feminists, and decolonial thinkers Arturo Escobar, Walter Mignolo, Catherine Walsh, and Maria Lugones have been crucial for my understanding of the epistemic violence of Eurocentrism.

**II Thinking the academia in the promotion of autonomy**

Can the modern/colonial academia contribute to sustain forms of epistemic dissent aiming at promoting global social justice and autonomy? And if so, how?

In exploring these questions I have been involved in different collaborative research initiatives including the Transnational Network Other Knowledges  (RETOS) and its autonomous publishing house. I also collaborate with Suumil Mooktaan in Sinanche, Yucatan, Mexico. 

**III Learning as liberation/liberation of learning**

I am interested in the application of anti-oppressive and decolonial pedagogies in my teaching articulated as pedagogies of positionality, pedagogies of relationality, and pedagogies of transition (Icaza and Vazquez 2018). In teaching about the politics of decolonial investigations and decolonizing research practices, I seek to encourage relational accountability and mutual (un)learning. My pedagogical practices are inspired by Third-world, Chicana, Black, and decolonial feminist theories and epistemologies. I  collaborate with the Going Glocal initiative - co-financed by the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs as a pioneering effort in education and research on global citizenship in The Netherlands (www.goingglocal.nl) and teach in the Decolonial Summer School "Maria Lugones" co-organized by the Utrecht Univerity College and the Van Abbe Museum in Eindhoven. 

**IV Plural feminisms for plural liberations**:

I am deeply interested in inter-cultural dialogues among different strands of feminisms. I have been exploring the ideas of coalitional politics as developed by Maria Lugones and the points of convergence and divergence between decolonial and post-colonial feminisms.

I welcome PhD students and post-doctoral fellows interested in any of these broad areas of research. 

PhD Co-supervision (Graduated)

Dr. Paulina Trejo Mendez (Mexico) with Cum Laude “Politics of Knowledge: weaving stories of dehumanization, erasure, and resistance in the highlands of Chiapas”. Graduated 13 September 2019. Promotor: Professor Wendy Harcourt

Dr. Jacqueline Gaybor Tomas (Ecuador) “The Body Politics of Menstruation: technologies, sustainability and destigmatization”. Graduated 21 February 2020. Promotors: Professor Wendy Harcourt and Professor Peter Knorringa

Dr. Cynthia Bejeno (Philippines) “On the Frontlines: Peasant Women and their Land Reform Struggles in the Philippines”. Graduated on 29 October 2021. Promotor Professor Irene van Staveren. 

Dr. Zuleika Sheik (South Africa) with Cum Laude “Liminagraphy: Lessons in life-affirming research practices for collective liberation”. Graduated on 13 December 2021. Promotor Professor Arjun Bedi. 

Dr. Martha Music (Serbia/Spain)Towards a Pluriverse of Systemic Alternatives: Decolonial feminist perspectives”. Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, with Dr Federico de Maria. Graduated on 26 May 2023.

Dr Tamara Soukotta (Indonesia) “The Past in the Present: Coloniality, Segregation and Political Economy of Identities in Ambon, Indonesia.”  Graduated on 07 July 2023. Co-Promotor Professor Mansoob Murshed.

Dr Constance Dupuis (Canada) “Bodies, Technologies, and Wellbeing: Towards an Intergenerational Approach to Aging and Environmental Wellbeing”. Graduated on 02 October 2023. Co-Promotor Professor Wendy Harcourt. 

Dr Marina Cadaval Narezo (Mexico) “Graduate education policy, indigenous women and social development”. Graduated on 27 November 2023. Co-Promotor Professor Wendy Harcourt.

PhD Researchers under my supervision

Esther Beckley (Nigeria) “Local Feminist Knowledge and Practice Vs. Liberal Peacebuilding: The Reintegration of Female Ex-Combatants in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Liberia”, with Dr Ana Khakee. University of Malta. Expected Graduation 2024.

Umbreen Salim (Pakistan) “Kitchens, Politics, Place, Temporalities. Pakistani migrant women negotiating mandatory integration in the cities of The Hague and Amsterdam”. Erasmus University Rotterdam, ISS. Co-Promotor Professor Wendy Harcourt. Expected Graduation 2024.

 Raphael Hoetmer (Netherlands)Disputed Territories, Institutions and Autonomies in Peru. Perspectives from three decades of contemporary extractivism in Peru”. Erasmus University Rotterdam, ISS. Promotor. Supervisor Dr Kees Biekart. Expected Graduation 2025.

Christopher Frattina de la Frattina (United Kingdom) “Liminality and Practice: geographies of knowledge and resistance in Sudan”, University of Oxford, School of Geography and the Environment, St. Antony’s College, with Dr. Amber Murrey. Expected Graduation 2025.

Esquisa Omaña (Argentina) “Existencia, resistencia y territorialización campesina en la Venezuela del Siglo XXI:  Empresas Campesinas de las Haciendas Cata y Cuyagua, Estado Aragua e Instituto Latinoameticano de Agroecología “Paulo Freire”, Estado Barinas”. Universidad de Córdova, Doctorado en Estudios Sociales Agrarios. Expected Graduation 2025.

Ana Barbosa (Brazil) “Citizen Science and Epistemologies of the South”, with Professor Hub Zwart and Dr Yogi Hendlin. Erasmus University Rotterdam, Philosophy Department. Expected Graduation 2025.

Jonathan Oxley Moniz (ISS) "Situating the Violence of Sustainability; a critical analysis through the lense of nature and indigeneity", with Dr Daphina Misiedjan. Erasmus University Rotterdam, ISS. Expected Graduation 2026. 

Rui Wang (China) "Her power and her economy on short video platforms. Research on the female image shaping and short video making in tiktok", with Dr Sree Sathiamma. Erasmus University Rotterdam, ISS. Expected Graduation 2026. 

Watfa Najdi (Libano) “Thinking Refugee Leadership and Localization from the Eastern Mediterranean and the Netherlands: Selective Empowerment or Systemic Colonizing Exclusion?”, with Dr Zeynep Kasli. Erasmus University Rotterdam, ISS. Expected Graduation 2027.

Lisa-Marlene Gronemeier (Germany) “Revisiting feminist studies: An experiential study of feminist knowledge politics and their role in epistemic justice in Dutch and German higher education”. Erasmus University Rotterdam, ISS. Expected Graduation 2027.

International Institute of Social Studies

Full professor | Academic staff unit
Email
icaza@iss.nl

Work

  • Rosalba Icaza Garza (12 October 2023) - Personalities and groups say 'Stop war against humanity in North and East Syria'
  • Rosalba Icaza Garza, S de Jong & O Rutazibwa (25 October 2019) - Scholen zijn zo gebouwd dat ze ons moeten scheiden, in plaats van samen te brengen

  • Agustina Solera, RV Rolando Vazquez, Khayaat Fakier, Wendy Harcourt & Rosalba Icaza Garza (2022) - Prince Claus Chair Postdoctoral Seminar Series. Building bridges with Latin American critical thought and experience (Organiser)
    Activity: Organising and contributing to an event Academic
  • Agustina Solera, Rosalba Icaza Garza, Wendy Harcourt, Khayaat Fakier & RV Rolando Vazquez (2022) - Prince Claus Chair Postdoctoral Seminar Series. Building bridges with Latin American critical thought and experience (Organiser)
    Activity: Organising and contributing to an event Academic
  • Rosalba Icaza Garza (2018) - "Decolonial Feminism and Development" [webinar] (Speaker)
    Activity: Oral presentation Academic
  • Rosalba Icaza Garza (2018) - Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies (Journal) (Editor)
    Activity: Publication Peer-review Academic

Journal Globalizations

Start date approval
January 2023
End date approval
January 2026
Place
UK
Description
Editorial Board

Maria Lugones Decolonial Summer School

Start date approval
January 2023
End date approval
January 2026
Place
UTRECHT
Description
Lecture series

Red Transnacional Otros Saberes Publishing House

Start date approval
January 2023
End date approval
January 2026
Place
MEXICO
Description
Co-Chief Editor

Routledge Post-Covid World Series

Start date approval
January 2023
End date approval
January 2026
Place
UK
Description
Editorial Board

Suumil Mootk'an Tejiendo Saberes para la Vida

Start date approval
January 2023
End date approval
January 2026
Place
YUCATAN, MEXICO
Description
Member of the Advisory Board

2101 The Making of Development

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-2101-24-25

Board of Examiners

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-BOE-24-25

Major SJP

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-SJP-24-25

General Information

Year
2024
Course Code
ISSGENERAL-24-25

3105 Research Paper Preparation

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-3105-24-25

4153 Cont Perspectives on Social Justice

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-4153-24-25

3211 Decoloniality in the Devt Res Con

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-3211-24-25

4354 Transitions for Social Justice Lab

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-4354-24-25

5401 Research Paper

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-5401-24-25

News regarding prof.dr. RA (Rosalba) Icaza Garza

Decoloniality and intersectionality in dance

Rosalba Icaza wins research grant to provide diversity training to three European dance academies
Group of people in multiple colors to show diversity

“A world in which many worlds can fit:” On Knowledge Production and Multiplicity

Rosalba Icaza and Sara Salem discuss issues of gender and sexuality, pluriversality, decolonial and feminist knowing, and the politics of decoloniality
Les femmes d'Algers

Decolonizing the curriculum

Dr Rosalba Icaza discusses the colonial legacy of universities and pedagogical practices. Listen to the full podcast.
Decolonizing the curriculum - Podcast - Rosalba Icaza

Compare @count study programme

  • @title

    • Duration: @duration
Compare study programmes