Abstract:
BACKGROUND : For many years, the lived experiences, knowledge systems and histories of
previously colonised people have been misinterpreted, removed and devalued in university
teaching. The present curricula of African universities are predominantly Eurocentric and
Criminology is no exception. In the wake of the #RhodesMustFall student protest action,
there is a recognition and need to include African epistemology within the discipline of
Criminology.
AIM : The study investigated the views of lecturers and postgraduate students regarding the
content, transformation and decolonisation of Criminology curricula.
SETTING : South African universities offering Criminology as a degree and/or academic subject.
METHODS : A total of 87 respondents, 42 lecturers and 45 postgraduate students, voluntarily
participated in an online survey. Lecturers were purposively selected whilst postgraduate
students were recruited via snowball sampling.
RESULTS : Nearly all the respondents had heard of decolonisation before, with the majority of
the academic staff members being aware of it prior to #RhodesMustFall. Respondents agreed
that the Criminology curriculum needs to be decolonised, with statistically significant
differences emanating between black lecturers and white lecturers.
CONCLUSION : Decolonisation and transformation have been debated for many years without
meaningful translation in and changes to Criminology curricula.