A thriving Decolonising Wikipedia network formed at London College of Communication (LCC) in 2020 and expanded across UAL in 2021.
The network supports UAL students and staff to edit Wikipedia through the lenses of anti-racism and decolonisation. This includes increasing the visibility and credibility of under-represented and marginalised figures and topics connected to art and design subject disciplines.
The group emerged from a Wikipedia editathon that took place at LCC in May-June 2020. The event generated nearly 100 edits of existing Wikipedia articles, including the pages for Chinese dancer and choreographer Yang Liping, and Nigerian sound and installation artist Emeka Ogboh.
Find out who leads the network, get the latest updates and join us if you are a member of staff or a UAL student.

Who's who in the network
The Decolonising Wikipedia network is led by LCC and UAL academic and Wikimedian in Residence, Lucy Panesar. It is co-facilitated by:
- London College of Communication Student Changemakers, a group of students and alumni actively engaged in decolonising knowledge and the curriculum
- Alex Duncan of Arts + Feminism
- Richard Nevell from Wikimedia UK.
Partnership of the Year 2021
The network encourages anyone at UAL to contribute to Wikipedia at a pace and scale that suits them. This ranges from a small intervention to an existing page in a day to writing a new Wikipedia page over a month.
Wikimedia UK formally named London College of Communication and the network its Partnership of the Year 2021, recognising its distinctive contribution to improving Wikipedia’s coverage of under-represented topics.

Latest network updates
Network founder Lucy Panesar began a Knowledge Exchange secondment with Wikimedia UK in October 2021. Her work decolonises Wikipedia’s database by looking at how the platform represents the colonial histories of London and what those histories mean for Londoners today. Lucy invites students and local communities to be part of the editing process.
Online workshops, editathons and cafés are run by and for the Decolonising Wikipedia network throughout the academic year. These support the UAL community in knowledge activism and editing Wikipedia through a decolonial lens. They include sessions related to the latest network project, London’s Colonial Her/Histories.
Find out more
- Read more about the network, including how to join if you are a UAL staff member or student, current projects and upcoming events.
- Follow @LpanesarLucy on Twitter for more project news.

More to explore
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Visitors reading students' magazine, Show at Oxo Tower. Image: David Poultney.
Decolonising the Arts Curriculum zine
Learn about the experience of international students and students of colour.
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Sonia Boyce, Devotional Wallpaper and Placards, 2008-2020. Acquired by the Contemporary Art Society for the Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art (MIMA) through the Rapid Response Fund, 2020.
Decolonising Arts Institute projects
Learn about Decolonising Arts Institute activities.
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Image: Andrew Brooks, AHRC Black Artists & Modernism project, Speech Acts exhibition opening, Manchester Art Gallery. Image: Andrew Brooks
Event recordings
Explore our recorded events.