"Critique of global hierarchies along with aspirations to decolonize knowledge have increased significantly in Western academia over recent decades. And yet this critique has hardly upset the global hierarchies that it has decried. In this book, Márton Demeter opens the closet to expose the skeleton of a production of academic knowledge that remains heavily determined by its location in the Global North."
-Professor Gilbert Achcar, SOAS University of London, UK
"Can the subaltern speak in communication studies? This is a deceptively simple question and, although recent arguments for the de-Westernization of communication studies take the answer for granted, Demeter's elegantly theorized and empirically detailed analysis shows that the reality is more complex than we thought. Scholars and institutions truly committed to the internationalization of knowledge will find this book to be an indispensable guide to fully understanding the challenges and crafting solutions. I enjoyed reading the book and I hope that it gets the wide attention it deserves.
-Professor Larry Gross, University of Southern California, USA
Márton Demeter is Associate Professor at the National University of Public Services, Hungary, and a Bolyai Research Fellow at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. His works have been widely published in leading periodicals such as International Journal of Communication and Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly.
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"Academic Knowledge Production and the Global South is a unique combination of a set of well-designed, rigorously crafted empirical studies and a carefully delineated theoretical model. This volume is an engaging read for Science of Science scholars and for all those, including me, who are interested in deep, data-based and courageous insight into global knowledge production processes in a social and geopolitical context." (Judit Mihalik, Publishing Research Quarterly, Vol. 37, 2021)
"The thought-provoking monograph will be interesting to the community of communications scholars ... ." (Zsolt Balázs Major, KOME, September 1, 2021)
"The thought-provoking monograph will be interesting to the community of communications scholars ... ." (Zsolt Balázs Major, KOME, September 1, 2021)