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Articles

Freireian and Ubuntu philosophies of education: Onto-epistemological characteristics and pedagogical intersections

Pages 2286-2296 | Received 17 Mar 2021, Accepted 17 Aug 2021, Published online: 07 Sep 2021
 

Abstract

Paulo Freire’s philosophy of education, popularized via his magnum opus, The Pedagogy of the oppressed (2000 [1970]) ‘shocked’ the world, sort of constructively, with its trenchant, au courant and futuristic meditations on the onto-epistemological lives of the marginalized in Latin America, and by elliptical extension, across the world. The central tenets of Freire’s thought as reflectively (and reflexively) acting upon the world to transform it, are as current today as these were in the late 1960s, majorly because of the subjectively active ways it interacts with our onto-epistemological locations and intentions. It is in appreciating such durable temporality about his philosophy that one can sense, indeed, thickly discern it trans-spatial and transcultural connections with the humanist African philosophy of Ubuntu and it educational foundations. Ubuntu in its across-Africa readings, represents both a practical and aspirational humanization of all people (more popularly, perceiving and practicing our personhoods through the personhoods of others) with the potential outcome, in the words of Desmond Tutu (in Battle, 2009), of the cessation of inter-people conflict and oppression. With these perspectives and prospects from Freire and Ubuntu, the intersecting subsets of the two are, I argue, thickly important with analytically discernible onto-epistemological and pedagogical connections and operations.

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No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Ali A. Abdi

Ali A. Abdi (PhD) is Professor of Social Development Education in the Department of Educational Studies at the University of British Columbia (Vancouver campus), where he previously served as Department Head. He is the former President of the Comparative and International Education Society of Canada (CIESC), and former Board of Directors Member for the Comparative and International Education Society (CIES). His areas of research and teaching include education and social development, critical foundations of education, citizenship and human rights education and anti-colonial studies in education. From 2009–2014, he was the Founding Co-Director of the Centre for Global Citizenship Education and Research (CGCER) at the University of Alberta. He is the Founding Editor of the Journal of Contemporary Issues in Education, and Co-founding Editor of Cultural and Pedagogical Inquiry. His books include Decolonizing philosophies of education (2011).

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