Abstract

ABSTRACTWhile hierarchies of knowledge have been extensively discussed, particularly with reference to the politics of knowledge production and utilisation in policy in developing countries, their constitution and legitimation in diverse and complex settings remain a point of contention. Informed by Bourdieu's sociological theory of research practice, this article expands the debate to locate it within two key intersecting domains of the intellectual and political field of policy production, namely, the knowledge foundational domain (discursive or epistemological), and the systemic and structural domain (the organisational environment and structure of relations within it). This article explores how these domains interface with the individual agency of key actors in the field as conditioned by race, class, gender and other forms of social difference. It argues that, given the apartheid legacy, the hierarchies of both the knowledge producers (who gains access, or who is legitimised) and of knowledge itself ...

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