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Ubuntu as a valued capability for university students in South Africa

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Ubuntu as a valued capability for university students in South Africa. / Mathebula, Mikateko; Martinez-Vargas, Carmen.
In: Journal of Student Affairs in Africa , Vol. 11, No. 2, 14.12.2023, p. 17-33.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Mathebula, M & Martinez-Vargas, C 2023, 'Ubuntu as a valued capability for university students in South Africa', Journal of Student Affairs in Africa , vol. 11, no. 2, pp. 17-33. https://doi.org/10.24085/jsaa.v11i2.3624

APA

Vancouver

Mathebula M, Martinez-Vargas C. Ubuntu as a valued capability for university students in South Africa. Journal of Student Affairs in Africa . 2023 Dec 14;11(2):17-33. doi: 10.24085/jsaa.v11i2.3624

Author

Mathebula, Mikateko ; Martinez-Vargas, Carmen. / Ubuntu as a valued capability for university students in South Africa. In: Journal of Student Affairs in Africa . 2023 ; Vol. 11, No. 2. pp. 17-33.

Bibtex

@article{5459c25812494fd5807eda301c7e5283,
title = "Ubuntu as a valued capability for university students in South Africa",
abstract = "Universities are often described as institutions that can promote the wellbeing of their local populations. This is because they are central for advancing human development aims which support the aspirations of students and the communities from which they come. Nevertheless, we know this potential can be constrained by historical processes of oppression and negation of indigenous ways of being and doing. Applying the Capabilities Approach and Human Development paradigm as a normative framework for the outcomes of university education in the South African context, we argue for a focus on the centrality of capabilities (real freedoms) in assessing how well universities are doing to support student wellbeing. We pay special attention to one capability which we see as architectonic for other freedoms, which is Ubuntu. While Ubuntu is generally understood as a moral philosophy, in this paper we articulate it as a valued capability in the space of higher education. We also argue that it is a capability that has transformative and decolonial potential that can enable universities to promote student wellbeing if the conditions to practice it are in place.Drawing from data collected through qualitative and participatory approaches in two longitudinal research projects that were carried out between 2016 and 2021 with undergraduate students in diverse universities in South Africa, we show that Ubuntu informs students{\textquoteright} conceptions of humanity and their aspirations for {\textquoteleft}a good life{\textquoteright} and that it can inform the vision of transformed and decolonised university spaces that reflect indigenous ways of being and indigenous ways of seeing the world.",
author = "Mikateko Mathebula and Carmen Martinez-Vargas",
year = "2023",
month = dec,
day = "14",
doi = "10.24085/jsaa.v11i2.3624",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "17--33",
journal = "Journal of Student Affairs in Africa ",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ubuntu as a valued capability for university students in South Africa

AU - Mathebula, Mikateko

AU - Martinez-Vargas, Carmen

PY - 2023/12/14

Y1 - 2023/12/14

N2 - Universities are often described as institutions that can promote the wellbeing of their local populations. This is because they are central for advancing human development aims which support the aspirations of students and the communities from which they come. Nevertheless, we know this potential can be constrained by historical processes of oppression and negation of indigenous ways of being and doing. Applying the Capabilities Approach and Human Development paradigm as a normative framework for the outcomes of university education in the South African context, we argue for a focus on the centrality of capabilities (real freedoms) in assessing how well universities are doing to support student wellbeing. We pay special attention to one capability which we see as architectonic for other freedoms, which is Ubuntu. While Ubuntu is generally understood as a moral philosophy, in this paper we articulate it as a valued capability in the space of higher education. We also argue that it is a capability that has transformative and decolonial potential that can enable universities to promote student wellbeing if the conditions to practice it are in place.Drawing from data collected through qualitative and participatory approaches in two longitudinal research projects that were carried out between 2016 and 2021 with undergraduate students in diverse universities in South Africa, we show that Ubuntu informs students’ conceptions of humanity and their aspirations for ‘a good life’ and that it can inform the vision of transformed and decolonised university spaces that reflect indigenous ways of being and indigenous ways of seeing the world.

AB - Universities are often described as institutions that can promote the wellbeing of their local populations. This is because they are central for advancing human development aims which support the aspirations of students and the communities from which they come. Nevertheless, we know this potential can be constrained by historical processes of oppression and negation of indigenous ways of being and doing. Applying the Capabilities Approach and Human Development paradigm as a normative framework for the outcomes of university education in the South African context, we argue for a focus on the centrality of capabilities (real freedoms) in assessing how well universities are doing to support student wellbeing. We pay special attention to one capability which we see as architectonic for other freedoms, which is Ubuntu. While Ubuntu is generally understood as a moral philosophy, in this paper we articulate it as a valued capability in the space of higher education. We also argue that it is a capability that has transformative and decolonial potential that can enable universities to promote student wellbeing if the conditions to practice it are in place.Drawing from data collected through qualitative and participatory approaches in two longitudinal research projects that were carried out between 2016 and 2021 with undergraduate students in diverse universities in South Africa, we show that Ubuntu informs students’ conceptions of humanity and their aspirations for ‘a good life’ and that it can inform the vision of transformed and decolonised university spaces that reflect indigenous ways of being and indigenous ways of seeing the world.

U2 - 10.24085/jsaa.v11i2.3624

DO - 10.24085/jsaa.v11i2.3624

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

SP - 17

EP - 33

JO - Journal of Student Affairs in Africa 

JF - Journal of Student Affairs in Africa 

IS - 2

ER -