Postdoctoral fellow Simone Peters is part of a multifaceted team of psychologists, psychiatrists and anthropologists looking at infant mental health in South Africa and Africa. Peters says, “Our aim is to create an archive of the only infant mental health module in Africa, learn ways to decolonise this very Western model of observing infants and create an African-centred model that can be distributed throughout Africa.”
Using decolonial methods, Peters lectures on black masculinities with the aim of shifting how young people are researched towards more holistic narratives about marginalised groups. “Academia uses methods that replicate stereotypes about certain bodies of people,” she says.
Her work also involves researching and writing, including work with migrant women living with HIV and navigating Covid-19, as well as working with young coloured men living in and navigating often violent spaces, and how their stories are told in academia.
I have the ability to achieve the dreams I set out for myself. I have never looked back and learnt to trust my voice.