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Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to examine some of the challenges authors from post-colonial contexts face in writing and doing research in management and organisation studies.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper is based on a self-reflection and also draws upon concepts from post and decolonial conceptual approaches.

Findings

It identifies three challenges namely, limitations or research question as what is feasible; translation and truth production; poor writing and weak theoretical contribution. It suggests three jugaad fixes to deal with these challenges namely, innovation and flexibility in method use with argumentation; translate, but late with theorising in the vernacular, and incorporating context into problematisation.

Research limitations/implications

It draws attention to the different needs of authors from post-colonial contexts.

Practical implications

It could possibly help authors from post-colonial contexts and reviewers better navigate academic publishing and research.

Social implications

It could help in authors from post-colonial contexts attempt more publishing.

Originality/value

This paper draws attention to the different constraints and limitations faced by authors from post-colonial contexts in pursuing academic writing.

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