“…Broadfoot and Munshi (2007) raised the provocative question regarding how to recover alternative rationalities and/or emotionalities, worldviews, and voices of organizing in the global context. Since then, scholars have recovered/highlighted native, indigenous, and other forms of organizing that are often erased from prominent organizational research (e.g., Cruz, 2017; Cruz & Utah Sodeke, 2021; Dutta & Pal, 2010; Kang et al, 2016; Long, 2016) and called for continued efforts to challenge the dominant Euro-American intellectual traditions in organizational communication (Broadfoot et al, 2018; Pal et al, 2022; Pal & Nieto-Fernandez, 2023). Yet, this decolonial orientation to the knowledge of organizing has continued to encounter challenges, as the Euro-American roots of management have promoted themselves as culturally neutral and universal (Cruz & Utah Sodeke, 2021).…”