Michael McEachrane is a Member and the Rapporteur of the UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent. He is also a 2024–2025 Racial Justice Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, a 2024 Visiting Fellow at the Harvard Law School Human Rights Program, an External Affiliate of the Sarah Remond Parker Centre for the Study of Racism at University College London and was previously a Visiting Researcher at the Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights in Sweden 2017–2024. His research is in the areas of Postcolonial/Decolonial Studies, Black European Studies, Critical Race Studies, Human Rights, and the Philosophy of Psychology. Louis Faye is a cultural entrepreneur, writer and photographer. Born in Berlin and raised in Senegal and Morocco, he is the founding Director of the cultural association Diggante—which during the 1990s and 2000s helped introduce a postcolonial and diasporic consciousness to Sweden through cultural events, tours, and bringing such postcolonial luminaries to Sweden as V.Y. Mudimbe, Gayatri Spivak, Paul Gilroy, and Angela Davis.
Foregrounding how Sweden has directly and indirectly benefited from colonial subjugation, both as a settler colonial state and as a member of the larger white-European polity, the chapters of Decolonial Sweden gather a compelling and well-researched much needed account of how the colonial and racial conditions of global capital reach all and every corner of the planet. Denise Ferreira da Silva, author of Unpayable Debt (2022), New York University, USA. Decolonial Sweden offers a much-needed reminder that coloniality is both unexceptional and specific, situated; that our scholarship and politics have to engage this tension and that we have to do this collectively, using various registers and languages. This volume is a welcome tool in the struggle against colonial amnesia and disavowal. Olivia U. Rutazibwa, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK. An incredibly important and groundbreaking seminal work which fills many gaps left out of Sweden’s colonial history and national imaginary. This book offers sharp, clear-eyed discourse, which should open minds, educate, and stoke much needed flames of change. Lọlá Ákínmádé Åkerström, international bestselling author of In Every Mirror She’s Black.