“Diasporic Womanist Sociology is a much-needed, field-shifting intervention that recenters Global South and diasporic knowledges, elevating spiritual and community epistemologies, and naming a decolonial praxis for research, teaching, and collective action. Its womanist methodology, rooted in history, dialogue, reflexivity, healing, and justice, bridges the academy and community and models research justice in motion. Impressive in its breadth and depth, the book invites us into a deeply ethical sociology that is built on accountability, reciprocity and justice.”Julia Chinyere Oparah, Professor of Sociology and Leadership Studies, University of San Francisco“Medwinter, Latchminarain, and Jackson make a stunning contribution to the constitution of Diasporic Womanist Sociology as a field and community of scholars. Grounded in vivid personal histories and provocative discussions of theory, methodology and pedagogical praxis, the volume offers rich case studies from the global South and its diaspora to illustrate the power of womanist decolonial struggles. Its stories help us reimagine the nature of intersectional resistance and the futures that it could bring into being.”Millie Thayer, Professor of Sociology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and Author of Transnational Feminist Itineraries: Situating Theory and Activist Practice (2021) “In this innovative volume, the editors and authors seek to decolonize not just their research, but their teaching, mentoring, and, really, their lives. In this work, the authors and editors take us on a journey of lived experience and on a path towards creating an entirely new way of being a sociologist and doing sociology. This collective diasporic womanist project is a must read for those interested in bridging the gap between academia and community.”Tiffany Taylor, Professor of Sociology, Kent State University