Education and other modes of thinking in Latin America

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Adult Education
Adult Learning Education
Adult Women's Education
Adult Women’s Education
America
Bologna
Category=JNA
Civil Society
CONFINTEA VI
counter-hegemonic processes
Cracks
critical literacy
critical pedagogy
cultural resistance
Decolonial Pedagogies
decolonial theory
education and learning
Education System
educational paradigms
epistemic justice
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Held
Hugo Chaves
indigenous knowledge systems
International Journal of Lifelong Education
Latin America
Latin American Pedagogy
Latin American Popular Education
liberation theology
Lived
North
Pedagogical Nature
Popular Education
popular education movements
postcolonial education paradigms
social transformation Latin America
Solidarity Economy
Solidarity Economy Enterprises
Solidarity Enterprise
Standpoint
Strong
USA
Workshops

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138229662
  • Weight: 390g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Nov 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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After long periods of military dictatorships, civil wars, and economic instability, Latin America has changed face, and become the foremost region for counter-hegemonic processes. This book seeks to address contemporary paradigms of education and learning in Latin America. Although the production of knowledge in the region has long been subject to imperial designs and disseminated through educational systems, recent interventions – from liberation theology, popular education, and critical literacy to postcolonial critique and decolonial options – have sought to shift the geography of reason.

Over the last decades, several Latin American communities have countered this movement by forming some of the most dynamic and organised forms of resistance: from the landless movements in Brazil to the Zapatistas in the Chiapas region of Mexico, from the indigenous social movements in Bolivia to Venezuela’s Chavistas, to mention but a few. The central question to be addressed is how, in times of historical ruptures, political reconstructions, and epistemic formations, the production of paradigms rooted in ‘other’ logics, cosmologies, and realities may renegotiate and redefine concepts of education, learning, and knowledge. Consequently, this book transcends disciplinary, epistemological, and methodological boundaries in education and learning by engagement with ‘other’ paradigms. This book was originally published as a special issue of the International Journal of Lifelong Education.

Robert Aman is Lecturer in Education in the School of Education, University of Glasgow, UK. His research focuses on the relationship between education, the geopolitics of knowledge and various forms of exclusion and marginalisation, drawing on decolonial theories. His book, Decolonising Intercultural Education: Colonial Differences, the Geopolitics of Knowledge, and Inter-Epistemic Dialogue, is forthcoming with Routledge. Timothy Ireland is Associate Professor at the Federal University of Paraíba, Brazil, where he teaches on the postgraduate programmes in Education and Human Rights and is currently Director of the UNESCO Chair in Youth and Adult Education. His principal areas of research relate to education in prisons, the use of digital media in the literacy process, and international policy on adult lifelong learning and education. His most recent book, Adult Education in Retrospective: 60 years of CONFINTEA, was published by UNESCO in English, Portuguese and Spanish.