Decolonial Underground Pedagogy: Unschooling and Subcultural Learning for Peace and Human Rights
By (Author) Noah Romero
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
5th September 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Decolonisation of knowledge / Decoloniality
Hardback
168
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book explores how minority-led skateboarding, punk rock, and unschooling communities engage in collective efforts to humanize education and construct kinder social frameworks. Noah Romero examines the roles of informal and community-embedded learning in actualizing transformative education and shows how decolonizing education can take place outside of school settings. Grounded in the authors own experience in minority-led Filipino subcultures, the book introduces a conceptual framework of subcultural learning and decolonizing education centred on the Philippines and its diaspora in Australia, New Zealand, and the United States. Romero argues that educational paradigms with peace, human rights, multiculturalism, social justice, and decolonization at the centre can extend beyond the classroom, curriculum, and teaching and into communities. By showing how minoritized people are redefining identity and knowledge through embodied community-responsive pedagogies, the book contributes to wider debates on Indigeneity, gender justice, human rights, peace studies, and decolonizing education.
Noah Romero is an Assistant Professor of Native American and Indigenous Studies at Hampshire College, USA.