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Pedagogies of struggle and collective organization: the educational practices of the Brazilian Landless Workers Movement

Pedagogies of struggle and collective organization: the educational practices of the Brazilian Landless Workers Movement

Alessandro Mariano, Erivan Hilário, Rebecca Tarlau
2016
2016

Abstract

The Brazilian Landless Workers Movement (MST) is one of the largest and most influential social movements in Latin America. Since the very beginning of the movement’s agrarian reform struggle, MST leaders have developed a broad-based program of leadership, political training, and education for all participants in the movement. The MST’s educational demands are organically connected to the movement’s attempt to create, in the present, a new social order based on social justice, participatory democracy, autonomy, and humanistic and socialist values. The goal of this article is to introduce to an English-speaking audience the main contours and components of the MST’s educational proposal. The first part of this article discusses the three theoretical foundations of the movement’s educational approach and its five pedagogical practices. The second part of the paper presents two concrete experiences of educational institutions administered by the MST leadership: the “Itinerant Schools” in Paraná, a network of public schools located inside MST occupied encampments, and the MST’s national political training school, the Escola Nacional Florestan Fernandes (ENFF). Together, these two cases offer concrete examples of how the MST’s educational proposal is implemented in diverse Brazilian contexts.

Article
Our Research

Abstract

The Brazilian Landless Workers Movement (MST) is one of the largest and most influential social movements in Latin America. Since the very beginning of the movement’s agrarian reform struggle, MST leaders have developed a broad-based program of leadership, political training, and education for all participants in the movement. The MST’s educational demands are organically connected to the movement’s attempt to create, in the present, a new social order based on social justice, participatory democracy, autonomy, and humanistic and socialist values. The goal of this article is to introduce to an English-speaking audience the main contours and components of the MST’s educational proposal. The first part of this article discusses the three theoretical foundations of the movement’s educational approach and its five pedagogical practices. The second part of the paper presents two concrete experiences of educational institutions administered by the MST leadership: the “Itinerant Schools” in Paraná, a network of public schools located inside MST occupied encampments, and the MST’s national political training school, the Escola Nacional Florestan Fernandes (ENFF). Together, these two cases offer concrete examples of how the MST’s educational proposal is implemented in diverse Brazilian contexts.

Social Movements

Landless Workers' Movement (MST)

Keywords

Latin America, Nonformal Education, Pedagogy, Popular Education, Praxis, Public Schooling

Theme

Popular Education; Adult Education; and Social Movement Learning, Social Movements Within; Through; and for Public Education

Related People

Rebecca Tarlau