Books by Mechthild Nagel
SUNY Press, 2024
How can we tackle racism and sexism on our college and university campuses? What is the role of e... more How can we tackle racism and sexism on our college and university campuses? What is the role of education leaders in advancing social justice? Reframing Diversity and Inclusive Leadership addresses the urgent need for more than merely performative gestures toward—and a redoubled, authentically engaged investment in—diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). Seth N. Asumah and Mechthild Nagel examine how traditional leadership models have tended to exacerbate racial and gender inequities in United States higher education and society at large. Using a cross-cultural, comparative approach indebted to critical race theory, critical whiteness studies, and Black feminism, Asumah and Nagel draw on decades of combined experience in the US and globally to provide a framework for inclusive leadership practices, actions, and policies. A valuable resource for administrators, faculty, students, and political and industry leaders, Reframing Diversity and Inclusive Leadership responds to calls for justice on campuses and beyond.
Umass Amherst, 1996
This is a PhD dissertation on a critique of play in western philosophy. It was reworked as monogr... more This is a PhD dissertation on a critique of play in western philosophy. It was reworked as monograph: Masking the Abject (Lexington, 2002)
Routledge, 2023
Ludic Ubuntu Ethics develops a positive peace vision, taking
a bold look at African and Indigeno... more Ludic Ubuntu Ethics develops a positive peace vision, taking
a bold look at African and Indigenous justice practices and
proposes new relational justice models. ‘Ubuntu’ signifies
shared humanity, presenting us a sociocentric perspective
of life that is immensely helpful in rethinking the relation
of offender and victim.In this book, Nagel introduces a new
theoretical liberation model - ludic Ubuntu ethics - to
showcase five different justice conceptions through a
psychosocial lens allowing for a contrasting analysis of
negative Ubuntu towards positive Ubuntu.
Read the Foreword by Prof. Joseph C.A. Agbakoba and my Intro below in URL
contesting carceral logic: towards abolitionist futures, 2022
In our era, carceral logic, or the punishment mindset that suggests imprisonment is usually the b... more In our era, carceral logic, or the punishment mindset that suggests imprisonment is usually the best solution to social problems besetting the 99%, dominates in government thinking and action. The dominance of carceral thinking suggests that not only are modern societies indulging in an assumption that has proven false (that punishment and imprisonment work as solutions to social problems), but that in the process they, like a hammer that sees only contexts in which to pummel, have become carceral states that see only contexts in which to punish and imprison.
This book aims to lay out some of the contours of carceral logic and to contest it by highlighting impacts penal abolition will have. Contesting Carceral Logic: Towards Abolitionist Futures provides an innovative and cutting-edge analysis of the way in which carceral logic has become embedded within society and how we might think, feel and act to leave it the dustbin of historicity. It is an exploration of the consequences and harms of carceral logic from around the world, and as such is a valuable tool for students, activists and scholars engaging with critiques of carceral logic and looking to build alternatives. It is a valuable introduction to key issues and debates for students on penology, criminology, social policy, geography, politics and social history programs in countries all around the world.
The Routledge International Handbook of Penal Abolition, 2021
This chapter analyzes ideological claims regarding South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commis... more This chapter analyzes ideological claims regarding South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) and Rwanda’s Gacaca courts. Both transitional justice practices have been praised as restorative or even therapeutic. The TRC popularized the quasi-religious ethics of Ubuntu (i.e., shared humanity) engendering feelings of forgiveness in victims of apartheid injustice. Similarly, the Gacaca informal justice proceedings have been considered by restorative justice advocates as a paradigm case of overcoming ethnic hatred. I will argue that the TRC may have fallen short of such lofty goal of forgiveness, but in the end it did not succumb to a logic of revenge. By contrast, the Gacaca courts, set up by a Tutsi-dominated government with approval of the world (legal) community, unraveled a retributive victors’ justice while eliding true restorative justice. However, Rwanda’s authoritarian government presented quite successfully Gacaca as a restorative justice model. The comparative analysis will show that the Rwandan experience of tarrying with transitional justice could be characterized as negative Ubuntu or victor’s justice ideology, while the South African experience can be portrayed as Ubuntu in the positive, championing authentic Ubuntu ethics, which avoids an Othering process that often leads to further violence between aggrieved parties.
Diversity, Social Justice, and Inclusive Excellence, Jun 1, 2014
An interdisciplinary anthology exploring issues related to diversity, multiculturalism, and socia... more An interdisciplinary anthology exploring issues related to diversity, multiculturalism, and social justice.
When students are introduced to the study of diversity and social justice, it is usually from sociological and psychological perspectives. The scholars and activists featured in this anthology reject this approach as too limiting, insisting that we adopt a view that is both transdisciplinary and multiperspectival. Their essays focus on the components of diversity, social justice, and inclusive excellence, not just within the United States but in other parts of the world. They examine diversity in the contexts of culture, race, class, gender, learned ability and dis/ability, religion, sexual orientation, and citizenship, and explore how these concepts and identities interrelate. The result is a book that will provide readers with a better theoretical understanding of diversity studies and will enable them to see and think critically about oppression and how systems of oppression may be challenged.
At the State University of New York College at Cortland, Seth N. Asumah is SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor and Professor of Political Science, and Mechthild Nagel is Professor of Philosophy. Together they have coedited Prisons and Punishment: Reconsidering Global Penality.
This book brings together a collection of social justice scholars and activists who take Foucault... more This book brings together a collection of social justice scholars and activists who take Foucault’s concept of discipline and punishment to explain how prisons are constructed in society from nursing homes to zoos. This book expands the concept of prison to include any institution that dominates, oppresses, and controls. Criminologists and others, who have been concerned with reforming or dismantling the criminal justice system, have mostly avoided to look at larger carceral structures in society. In this book, for example, scholars and activists question the way patriarchy has incapacitated women and imagine the deinstitutionalization of people with disabilities. In a time when popular sentiment critiques the dominant role of the elites (the “one percenters”), the state’s role in policing dissenting voices, school children, LGBTQ persons, people of color, and American Indian Nations, needs to be investigated. A prison, as defined in this book, is an institution or system that oppresses and does not allow freedom for a particular group. Within this definition, we include the imprisonment of nonhuman animals and plants, which are too often overlooked.
In this Gedenkschrift, authors honor Iris Marion Young who was a world-renowned feminist moral an... more In this Gedenkschrift, authors honor Iris Marion Young who was a world-renowned feminist moral and political philosopher whose many books and articles spanned more than three decades. She explored issues of social justice and oppression theory, the phenomenology of women's bodies, deliberative democracy and questions of terrorism, violence, international law and the role of the national security state.
Editor, Special Issue by Mechthild Nagel
Kalagatos, 2018
The Ubuntu principle, popularized by Archbishop Desmond Tutu presiding over the Truth and Reconci... more The Ubuntu principle, popularized by Archbishop Desmond Tutu presiding over the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in the New South Africa, has potential to assist Western philosophical conceptions of forgiveness in envisioning transformative justice. Aspects of Ubuntu overlap with the Western feminist inspired ethic of care while departing from Western ethics with its emphasis on spirituality and communalism.
Keywords
Gender. Transformative Justice. Ubuntu.
This special issue of Wagadu, edited by Mechthild Nagel, Professor of Philosophy and Director of ... more This special issue of Wagadu, edited by Mechthild Nagel, Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Center for Gender and Intercultural Studies, SUNY Cortland, takes to task the complexities of gendered lives in a global racialized world.
Wagadu
This special issue of Wagadu, edited by Mechthild Nagel, Professor of Philosophy and Director of ... more This special issue of Wagadu, edited by Mechthild Nagel, Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Center for Gender and Intercultural Studies, SUNY Cortland, takes to task the complexities of gendered lives in a global racialized world.
Read volume at: wagadu.org
Papers by Mechthild Nagel
Athens Journal of Education, Apr 29, 2024
Zeitschrift für Didaktik der Philosophie und Ethik, 2024
Was wäre, wenn das Ziel der Bestrafung nicht in der Abschreckung oder Vergeltung bestünde? Dieser... more Was wäre, wenn das Ziel der Bestrafung nicht in der Abschreckung oder Vergeltung bestünde? Dieser Artikel untersucht die Vorteile einer indigenen afrikanischen tugendethischen Perspektive beim Überdenken von Strafe, insbesondere der Strafrechtspflege. Die afro-kommunale Konzeption der Ubuntu-Ethik geht Konflikte ganzheitlich an, statt agonistisch, und kann deswegen neuartige Wege in der Mediation-und Versöhnungspraxis aufzeigen.
The SUNY Journal of the Scholarship of Engagement: JoSE, 2024
This paper describes the experiences of TAs who participated in the applied learning SG program t... more This paper describes the experiences of TAs who participated in the applied learning SG program that is nested in the Department of Philosophy at a state university. Many of the college students enrolled in the philosophy course were pre-service teachers and were required to take the course to meet general education content knowledge requirements. College students taking the philosophy course volunteer in local schools, early childhood programs, and community-based schools.
Routledge eBooks, Oct 20, 2022
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Books by Mechthild Nagel
a bold look at African and Indigenous justice practices and
proposes new relational justice models. ‘Ubuntu’ signifies
shared humanity, presenting us a sociocentric perspective
of life that is immensely helpful in rethinking the relation
of offender and victim.In this book, Nagel introduces a new
theoretical liberation model - ludic Ubuntu ethics - to
showcase five different justice conceptions through a
psychosocial lens allowing for a contrasting analysis of
negative Ubuntu towards positive Ubuntu.
Read the Foreword by Prof. Joseph C.A. Agbakoba and my Intro below in URL
This book aims to lay out some of the contours of carceral logic and to contest it by highlighting impacts penal abolition will have. Contesting Carceral Logic: Towards Abolitionist Futures provides an innovative and cutting-edge analysis of the way in which carceral logic has become embedded within society and how we might think, feel and act to leave it the dustbin of historicity. It is an exploration of the consequences and harms of carceral logic from around the world, and as such is a valuable tool for students, activists and scholars engaging with critiques of carceral logic and looking to build alternatives. It is a valuable introduction to key issues and debates for students on penology, criminology, social policy, geography, politics and social history programs in countries all around the world.
When students are introduced to the study of diversity and social justice, it is usually from sociological and psychological perspectives. The scholars and activists featured in this anthology reject this approach as too limiting, insisting that we adopt a view that is both transdisciplinary and multiperspectival. Their essays focus on the components of diversity, social justice, and inclusive excellence, not just within the United States but in other parts of the world. They examine diversity in the contexts of culture, race, class, gender, learned ability and dis/ability, religion, sexual orientation, and citizenship, and explore how these concepts and identities interrelate. The result is a book that will provide readers with a better theoretical understanding of diversity studies and will enable them to see and think critically about oppression and how systems of oppression may be challenged.
At the State University of New York College at Cortland, Seth N. Asumah is SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor and Professor of Political Science, and Mechthild Nagel is Professor of Philosophy. Together they have coedited Prisons and Punishment: Reconsidering Global Penality.
Editor, Special Issue by Mechthild Nagel
Keywords
Gender. Transformative Justice. Ubuntu.
Read volume at: wagadu.org
Papers by Mechthild Nagel
a bold look at African and Indigenous justice practices and
proposes new relational justice models. ‘Ubuntu’ signifies
shared humanity, presenting us a sociocentric perspective
of life that is immensely helpful in rethinking the relation
of offender and victim.In this book, Nagel introduces a new
theoretical liberation model - ludic Ubuntu ethics - to
showcase five different justice conceptions through a
psychosocial lens allowing for a contrasting analysis of
negative Ubuntu towards positive Ubuntu.
Read the Foreword by Prof. Joseph C.A. Agbakoba and my Intro below in URL
This book aims to lay out some of the contours of carceral logic and to contest it by highlighting impacts penal abolition will have. Contesting Carceral Logic: Towards Abolitionist Futures provides an innovative and cutting-edge analysis of the way in which carceral logic has become embedded within society and how we might think, feel and act to leave it the dustbin of historicity. It is an exploration of the consequences and harms of carceral logic from around the world, and as such is a valuable tool for students, activists and scholars engaging with critiques of carceral logic and looking to build alternatives. It is a valuable introduction to key issues and debates for students on penology, criminology, social policy, geography, politics and social history programs in countries all around the world.
When students are introduced to the study of diversity and social justice, it is usually from sociological and psychological perspectives. The scholars and activists featured in this anthology reject this approach as too limiting, insisting that we adopt a view that is both transdisciplinary and multiperspectival. Their essays focus on the components of diversity, social justice, and inclusive excellence, not just within the United States but in other parts of the world. They examine diversity in the contexts of culture, race, class, gender, learned ability and dis/ability, religion, sexual orientation, and citizenship, and explore how these concepts and identities interrelate. The result is a book that will provide readers with a better theoretical understanding of diversity studies and will enable them to see and think critically about oppression and how systems of oppression may be challenged.
At the State University of New York College at Cortland, Seth N. Asumah is SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor and Professor of Political Science, and Mechthild Nagel is Professor of Philosophy. Together they have coedited Prisons and Punishment: Reconsidering Global Penality.
Keywords
Gender. Transformative Justice. Ubuntu.
Read volume at: wagadu.org