Popular Education and the Economics of Abolition - Dr. Priscilla Ferreira
OISE Auditorium
252 Bloor St. West
Toronto ON M5S 1V6
Canada
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Summary of Talk
The neoliberal university plays a crucial role in the global value chain of knowledge production. Under the dictates of the racial capitalist regime, the intellectual industrial complex functions to capture knowledge and turn knowledge producers into intellectual captives within boundaries of disciplinary and institutional traps.
Inside and outside of academia, communities of learning, especially those of color, have been experiencing the voracious extractivism of our material and intellectual resources, our leisure and organizing time, and our collective creative wealth.
Solidarity economy organizing as a praxis of autonomy calls us to dismantle the colonial legacies and the neoliberal political economies of knowledge production.
How to embody ancestor-accountable, mutually uplifting, and community-nurturing political education?
What new economic identities and economic possibilities might emerge when people experience mutual aid economies as a pedagogical praxis of autonomy and achievement?
Dr. Ferreira will discuss experiences of mutual-aid economies in popular education initiatives that she has co-created as a popular educator and community-engaged scholar. She will reflect on the role of scholars of economic justice in perpetrating or dismantling the intellectual industrial complex and suggest ideas on how to engage activist scholarship guided by the principles of solidarity economy and racial and epistemic justice.
Bio - Dr. Priscilla Ferreira
Dr. Priscilla Ferreira is an Afro-Brazilian feminist, abolitionist, and social justice educator. She is also an Assistant Professor of Geography and Latinx & Caribbean at Rutgers University, USA. Her work and activism focus on Black solidarity economies, Black geographies, and community-engaged pedagogies and scholarship.
She has been organizing with communities of color inside and outside of academia over the past twenty years and collaborated in several popular education projects internationally.
Dr. Ferreira is the coordinator of the English & Social Justice School, a language justice Black co-op that offers language training, interpretation and translation services for social movements and creates opportunities for international education and political collaboration for/with Black grassroots activist/scholar/artists.
She is a board member of Collective Diaspora, a new membership-based organization of Black cooperatives and Black-led co-op support organizations from across the African diaspora.
Her recent publications include a critique of white-centrism and epistemic injustice in solidarity economy movements in the journal Geoforum; experiential narratives of Black feminist research methodologies in Women Studies Quarterly, and a co-authored book in Portuguese, Tia Lucinha of Favela City of God (desses): The political biography of a community organizer (Desalinho Publicações, forthcoming 2023).
*The 2023 inaugural Jack Quarter Lectureship on the Social Economy has been organized by the Centre for Learning Social Economy & Work (CLSEW) and the Canadian Association for the Study of Adult Education (CASAE). It will take place during CASAE's annual conference.