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Los avances en Física se debatirán en Tucumán

América del Sur/Argentina/27 de septiembre de 2016/Fuente: lagaceta

La Facultad de Ciencias Exactas de la UNT será sede la semana próxima de la 101ª Reunión de la Asociación Física Argentina, que tendrá como invitado especial al Premio Nobel de Física 2004 David Gross. También habrá un espacio para las charlas de divulgación, en una actividad coordinada con el Ministerio de Educación de la Provincia. Precisamente, en ese marco, el miércoles 5, a las 10, en el Mercedes Sosa,el doctor Gross hablará del legado de Einstein, a 100 años de la Teoría de la Relatividad.

El acto inaugural del encuentro será el martes 4, a las 19, en el Teatro Alberdi , donde la UNT distinguirá con el título de Doctor Honoris Causa a David Gross.

La primera conferencia plenaria estará a cargo de Marina Bloj (Bradford School of Optometry and Vision Sciences, University of Bradford, Reino Unido). También confirmaron su presencia científicos de Estados Unidos, España y Chile. Entre las diversas ponencias está la de la cordobesa Gabriela González, quien integró en 2015 el equipo internacional que anunció la detección de ondas gravitacionales producidas por la colisión de agujeros negros. La reunión cuenta con el auspicio del Conicet; Secretaría de Ciencia, Arte e Innovación Tecnológica de la UNT (Sidetec); Gobierno de Tucumán y Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica, entre otras instituciones.

Fuente: http://www.lagaceta.com.ar/nota/700685/educacion/avances-fisica-se-debatiran-tucuman.html

Imagen: https://www.bbvaopenmind.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/bbva-openmind-ventana-entrevista-david-gross-premio-nobel-fisica.jpg

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México: Policía reprime a manifestantes en el segundo aniversario de Ayotzinapa

América del Norte/México/27 de septiembre de 2016/Fuente: lahaine

Policías reprimieron a estudiantes de la escuela Normal Rural de Ayotzinapa que se manifestaban un día antes de que se cumplan dos años de la desaparición de 43 de sus compañeros. El ataque se produjo después de una manifestación de las familias de los estudiantes en la que exigieron justicia y la aparición de sus hijos.

La Policía antimotines del estado los persiguió y detuvo a siete de ellos, luego los golpeó y paseó por la ciudad. Los jóvenes fueron llevados a Fiscalía General de Justicia del lugar y luego a la Comisión Estatal de Derechos Humanos en Guerrero (Coddehum), reportó el diario.

Los estudiantes respondieron a la represión con cohetones y piedras la sede del gobierno del estado y la fachada del auditorio Sentimientos de la Nación en la ciudad de Chilpancingo, capital de Guerrero.

De acuerdo con un comunicado difundido por el Comité de Padres de Familia de los 43, fue la Policía la que comenzó a lanzar gas lacrimógeno contra los estudiantes. Posteriormente, los uniformados embistieron a una camioneta propiedad de la escuela donde iban a bordo siete jóvenes y les causó diversas fracturas.

Los normalistas retuvieron patrullas para presionar por la liberación de sus compañeros, quienes salieron libres recién por la noche de este domingo 25. Las autoridades no interpusieron denuncia formal contra los normalistas.

Manifestaciones dos años después

Desde el 26 de septiembre de 2014, las plazas públicas de México se llenan de inconformes para exigir la presentación con vida de los estudiantes desaparecidos en el municipio de Iguala, ubicado a 123 kilómetros de Ayotzinapa.

Esta vez las familias de los normalistas ausentes convocaron a marchar de la Columna de la Independencia al Zócalo a las cuatro de la tarde, hora del centro del país.

En ciudades como Monterrey y Guadalajara también se realizarán actividades para exigir la aparición de los 43. Las jornadas culminarán el martes 27 con una marcha en la ciudad de Iguala y una ofrenda floral en el lugar del ataque, reporta TeleSUR.

Caso abierto

Los hechos de Iguala fueron calificados como desaparición forzada por organismos de derechos humanos como Amnistía Internacional y como un crimen de Estado por el exsecretario ejecutivo de la Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos (CIDH), Emilio Álvarez Icaza.

Y es que, hasta la fecha, todavía no se conoce el paradero de las víctimas. Por ello, la Comisión Nacional de Derechos Humanos de México declaró el caso Ayotzinapa «abierto» e instó a investigar la posible participación de policías municipales y federales en el crimen, reportó el sitio Aristegui Noticias.

Además, este 21 de septiembre, el representante del Alto Comisionado de las Naciones Unidas en materia de Derechos Humanos (ONU-DH) en México, Jan Jarab, visitó la Normal de Ayotzinapa y mantuvo un largo encuentro con las familias de los normalistas desaparecidos.

A pesar de que Jarab felicitó al gobierno federal por tener «avances en la investigación», recalcó que todavía hay «impunidad», pues no se sabe el paradero de las víctimas ni existe sanción para todos los responsables. Se reportó que el ejército pudo haber tomado el control de Iguala horas antes de la desaparición de los estudiantes.

Familiares de los 43 normalistas de Ayotzinapa

De acuerdo con diversos informes como los del Equipo Argentino de Antropología Forense (EAAF), creado específicamente para el caso Iguala, la versión oficial del Estado mexicano sobre la supuesta quema de los estudiantes en un basurero del municipio de Cocula, ubicado al sur de Iguala, no se sostiene.

Estas dudas llevaron a la Procuraduría General de México (PGR) a realizar nuevas pesquisas. El 20 de septiembre, el fiscal para el caso Iguala de la PGR, Alfredo Higuera, aseveró que identifica al menos 40 lugares donde podrían estar los restos de los normalistas. La dependencia mexicana contrató tecnología que procesa imágenes de alta definición, indica el diario ‘Excelsior’.

Ante el anuncio, las familias anunciaron que durante la semana del segundo aniversario comenzarán a buscar a sus hijos en los municipios de Iguala, Cocula, Huitzuco y Taxco.

Texto completo en: http://www.lahaine.org/policia-reprime-a-manifestantes-en

Imagen: https://cdn.rt.com/actualidad/public_images/2016.09/original/57e5ba70c4618866698b47cd.JPG

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España: La convivencia escolar, la innovación educativa y formación del profesorado, ejes del nuevo curso en Cantabria

Europa/España/27 de septiembre de 2016/Fuente: lainformacion

Educación insiste en la «normalidad» del inicio del curso y en que evaluará si el nuevo calendario escolar da los «frutos» esperados

La convivencia escolar, la innovación educativa y la formación del profesorado serán tres «elementos nucleares» que se ha marcado Cantabria para este nuevo curso escolar, que, según ha insistido el consejero del área, Ramón Ruiz, ha arrancado con «normalidad», tanto en Educación Primaria como en Secundaria.

Así lo ha anunciado este viernes el acto insticional que abre oficialmente el curso escolar 2016-2017, celebrado en el Centro de Profesorado de Viérnoles (Torrelavega), el consejero de Educación, Cultura y Deporte, Ramón Ruiz, quien, dentro de los ejes anunciados, ha concretado que se llevará a cabo un estudio del clima escolar que incluirá una comparación de los últimos diez años y se pondrá en marcha una Red de Centros Educativos Innovadores que analizará los elementos que contribuyen al «éxito escolar» para generalizarlos, e incidirá en la formación del profesorado.

Ruiz ha querido «calmar» a las familias y ha asegurado que los centros educativos de la comunidad autónoma son «seguros» y «saludables» para los alumnos pese a los casos detectados de acoso escolar, unos 400 en toda la región, según el último estudio existente.

El consejero ha asegurado que es un tema en el que su departamento está trabajando «intensamente» y, respecto al estudio sobre el clima escolar, ha explicado que se va a llevar a cabo en colaboración con la Universidad de Cantabria y que en él se va a analizar y comparar la evolución de este clima escolar entre 2006 y 2016.

En cuanto a la innovación educativa, el consejero ha señalado que, a juicio de su departamento, en Cantabria «se puede mejorar» en las estrategias metodológicas y en los planteamientos didácticos que se están llevando a cabo.

Ruiz ha explicado que un total de 21 centros educativos, tanto públicos como privados-concertados, han respondido a la propuesta de la Consejería de elaborar planes de innovación y ahora se creará con ellos la Red de Centros Educativos Innovadores, que analizará qué «elementos llevan al éxito escolar» para luego «generalizarlos» en todos los centros.

El tercer pilar de la acción de la Consejería de cara al nuevo curso será, según ha dicho, la formación del profesorado.

Y es que, a juicio de Ruiz, pese a que el profesorado de Cantabria está «cualificado» e «implicado», para avanzar en la innovación educativa que pretende la comunidad, se necesita aportar a los docentes un «andamiaje» y «ayuda».

Por ello, Ruiz ha explicado que se trabajará desde la Consejería para ofrecer al profesorado una formacion «cercana a los centros» y basada, no en la mejora individual, sino en los proyectos de los propios colegios e institutos. También se trabajará en este ámbito en la supervisión educativa y en el tema del liderazgo.

Ruiz ha explicado que los propios directores de los centros reconocen que dedican «más tiempo» a la gestión que al liderazgo educativo y, para paliar esta situación, ha anunciado que se va a diseñar un Plan de Formación en Liderazgo Educativo de dos años de duración.

En estos momentos, se está analizando si se va a implicar a la UC en este Plan e incluso se baraja la posibilidad de que éste cree un título propio en esta área.

Además de estos tres ejes «nucleares», Ruiz ha explicado que otras líneas de trabajo será la Formación Profesional (FP) y la escolarización temprana este curso.

En el acto, Ruiz se ha comprometido a trasladar por escrito al Consejo Escolar los objetivos y acciones que su departamento tiene para este curso, algo que prevé hacer en una reunión prevista para el 6 de octubre.

RUIZ INSISTE EN LA NORMALIDAD

Por otra parte, en el acto, Ruiz ha insistido en el acto de hoy en que el curso escolar se ha iniciado con «normalidad», en todos los niveles formativos.

Así, ha señalado que en Primaria el curso arrancó el 8 de septiembre con los alumnos y con los profesores ya en los centros, salvo los «flecos» de «siempre» de «última hora».

En cuanto al inicio del curso en Secundaria, criticado por el PP por –dice– producirse con «retraso» respecto a la fecha prevista (12 de septiembre–, Ruiz ha asegurado que «la normalidad en Secundaria es que se empiece de una forma escalonada, en funcion de la complejidad del centro».

El consejero ha explicado en el acto que ayer, jueves, habló con los directores de Primaria y de Secundaria, incluidos los de los centros privados y concertados, y todos ellos –dice Ruiz– coincidieron en que el curso había arrancado «con normalidad».

Ruiz ha insistido en la «complejidad» de los inicios del curso, «sobre todo» –ha dicho– cuando las recuperaciones se celebran en septiembre, dado que hay que «volver a matricular nuevos alumnos» y crear, incluso, nuevos grupos.

En este sentido, ha reconocido que hay centros que todavía están intentando «recolocar» a algunos alumnos que pasan de Secundaria a Bachillerato.

EL CALENDARIO ESCOLAR

Ruiz ha achacado el hecho de que este año el «foco de atención» se ha puesto en el inicio del curso escolar a la puesta en marcha del nuevo calendario escolar. «Algunos quieren evaluar su funcionamiento antes de que se haya puesto en marcha», ha opinado.

En este sentido, Ruiz ha señalado en que desde la propia Consejería se va a «evaluar» el calendario escolar puesto en marcha para comprobar que da los «frutos» que se esperan.

«Vamos a hacer un seguimiento del calendario. Nos comprometemos públicamente a ver si tiene ventajas, las que nosotros decimos o si hay que tomar alguna otra medida», ha dicho Ruiz, que ha insistido en que lo que se pretende conseguir es la «mejora física y emocional» del alumno y también contribuir a la innovación en los centros y a conseguir una evaluación más continua y formativa.

Al margen de las complejidades de este inicio del curso, del calendario escolar y de que la Ley Orgánica de Mejora de la Calidad Educativa se haya implantado «plenamente» en todos los niveles educativos (ha llegado este curso a 2 y 4 de Secundaria), Ruiz se ha mostrado convencido de que, con la ayuda de los profesores, se va a «poder sacar el curso adelante». «Contamos con ustedes», ha dicho el consejero.

Por su parte, Díaz Tezanos ha afirmado que cada inicio de curso escolar es un «pequeño milagro», por tratarse de una «tarea compleja» que requiere «del empeño de muchos», pero también un «motivo de alegría y esperanza» que, a su juicio, «anima» y da «fuerza» al Gobierno de Cantabria para afrontar los retos de la sociedad.

«La educación está repleta de futuro», ha dicho Díaz Tezanos, que, sin embargo, ha reconocido que «no da lo mismo» qué modelo o políticas se empleen en este ámbito.

Así, ha criticado la LOMCE promovida por el PP porque, a su juicio, crea «más desigualdad», en lugar de «curarla», y lleva a un camino «equivocado y erróneo». Por ello, ha abogado por una educación en que la «calidad» y la «equidad» estén «entrelazadas».

Revilla, por su parte, ha dado las «gracias» a todos los profesores, de los que, a su juicio, Cantabria se puede sentir «orgullosa» y se ha declarado un «enamorado» de la profesión.

«Espero que nosotros también estemos a la altura de lo que vais a hacer y estáis haciendo por la educación en Cantabria», ha dicho el presidente regional, encargado de declarar oficialmente inaugurado el curso.

Revilla ha defendido a la educación como «pilar absoluto de la Humanidad y ha explicado que es una de las «prioridades» de Cantabria, en la que –ha dicho– no se han aplicado recortes pese a la situación económica de la región y a su creencia de que está intervenida.

Al acto también ha acudido el alcalde de Torrelavega, José Manuel Cruz Viadero, quien ha agradecido al Gobierno regional (PRC-PSOE) su apuesta por una enseñanza pública de calidad, la cual –ha dicho– comparte el Consistorio.

Fuente: http://www.lainformacion.com/educacion/escuelas/convivencia-innovacion-formacion-profesorado-Cantabria_0_956305469.html

Imagen: imagenes.lainformacion.com/2016/09/23/educacion/escuelas/convivencia-innovacion-formacion-profesorado-Cantabria_956315952_113958213_667x375.jpg

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Formar a los jóvenes para las profesiones del futuro

Por. Laia Mestres

El mercado laboral ha cambiado mucho en los últimos años. La incorporación masiva de la tecnología, el impulso del emprendimiento, las reformas laborales y la movilidad, entre otros factores, han modificado las perspectivas de trabajo y las funciones de los departamentos dedicados a las personas y sus equipos.

Uno de los aspectos más relevantes es la aparición de nuevas profesiones. Según Joaquin Nieto, Director de la Oficina para España de la Organización Internacional del Trabajo (OIT), se dice que los niños y las niñas que ahora están en las escuela, el día de mañana trabajarán en oficios que todavía no existen.  

En la edición 2016 del monográfico sobre búsqueda de empleo hemos querido ampliar horizontes y mirar hacia el futuro preguntándonos:¿cómo formamos a los jóvenes para trabajos que todavía no existen? 

Las tendencias del mercado laboral del futuro

El informe «Trabajar en 2033» elaborado por la consultora de recursos humanos PWC muestra algunas de las tendencias económicas y sociales que influirán en el mercado laboral de los próximos años. Algunas de estas tendencias son:

  • Incremento de la movilidad internacional, que supondrá la búsqueda de talento en cualquier lugar del mundo. Para el trabajador implicará que las competencias y conocimientos técnicos que deberá desarrollar estarán relacionados con un mercado laboral global, donde cobrarán especial fuerza el dominio de idiomas y las competencias transversales como la capacidad de trabajar en equipo, la creatividad, la adaptación al cambio, etc.
  • Flexibilidad en el trabajo. El estudio prevé que en los próximos 20 años los trabajadores puedan acceder a trabajos más flexibles en cuanto a la jornada laboral, la movilidad dentro de una misma empresa o el trabajo para diferentes empleadores. Esto supone que el trabajador y la empresa establecerán nuevas formas de trabajar, más dinámicas y adaptadas a las necesidades de los proyectos.
  • La importancia de la marca personal. Las redes sociales ya son un aspecto clave en la búsqueda de empleo. En un futuro cercano, cuidar la marca personal y la imagen que se proyecta en Internet será imprescindible para encontrar y mantener el trabajo.
  • TIC, medio ambiente y turismo, los sectores punteros en nuestro país. El estudio muestra que en 2033 la tendencia mundial será un incremento del empleo en el sector de la hostelería y restauración (70% en 20 años), seguido de profesiones relacionadas con la gestión del agua y los residuos (44%) y un incremento de las profesiones tecnológicas (37%). Joaquin Nieto, director para España de la OIT, coincide en este punto: Los dos vectores de cambio de la sociedad actual son las nuevas demandas ambientales y las tecnologías. Y el sector que hace de ‘driver’ del cambio es la energía. La transición energética, el cambio de modelo energético, está ahí. Hay sectores que se van a tener que transformar a sí mismos. Otros que van a entrar en un declive y serán sustituidos por nuevos.

Esta breve pincelada de las tendencias del futuro permite ver en qué aspectos conviene centrarse como trabajadores. Las competencias, la formación continua y el reciclaje profesional y una cuidada reputación online serán imprescindibles para ser más empleables y poder desenvolvernos con soltura en este nuevo panorama laboral.

¿Cómo prepararse para los trabajos que todavía no existen?

Los estudios muestran que la aparición de nuevas profesiones será continua en un futuro inmediato. Las últimas tecnologías y en especial el sector móvil ocupan los principales nichos de empleo emergente. Según el «Informe Infojobs ESADE sobre el Mercado Laboral Español», las ofertas de trabajo en este sector se han multiplicado en un corto periodo de tiempo. De hecho, las previsiones de la Unión Europea apuntan en esa misma dirección: hasta 2020 se crearán 900.000 nuevos puestos de trabajo, sobre todo relacionados con la tecnología.

Entonces, ¿hay que centrarse en formarse en profesiones relacionadas con las TIC? Precisamente, la principal característica de estas profesiones es la rapidez en la que cambian, provocando que desaparezcan y aparezcan nuevas funciones, puestos de trabajo y necesidades formativas. Los expertos coinciden en que resulta imprescindible mantenerse actualizado para acceder y mantenerse en un puesto de trabajo en este sector, pero hay otras necesidades por cubrir. Sara Turumbay, presidenta de Aedipe Navarra, sostiene que los cambios nos harán replantearnos muchas cosas que hasta ahora funcionaban.

Para Jaume Gurt, Director de Organización y Desarrollo de Personas en Schibsted Spain, la clave para que los jóvenes puedan adaptarse al futuro es la formación por competencias, centrada en: estudiar idiomas; aprender a aprender; conocerse a uno mismo; desarrollar las softskills.

Por supuesto, todo este proceso debe ir acompañado de una profunda reforma del mercado laboral, el impulso del empleo y la creación de programas que faciliten el acceso de los jóvenes a los puestos de trabajo. Antonio Córcoles Gallo, de la Fundació per a la formació i l’estudi Paco Puerto, afirma que será necesario fortalecer las políticas que acompañen a las personas en su incorporación al mundo del trabajo, nuevas políticas de recursos humanos y reflexionar de qué manera formar a los jóvenes en trabajos que todavía no existen.

Fuente: http://www.educaweb.com/noticia/2016/09/20/formar-jovenes-profesiones-futuro-9537/

Imagen: images.et.eltiempo.digital/contenido/tecnosfera/novedades-tecnologia/IMAGEN/IMAGEN-16509607-2.png

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II Encuentro Binacional Ecuador- Bolivia sobre estrategias y procedimientos para la protección de bienes culturales patrimoniales, en Quito, Ecuador

América del Sur/Ecuador/Bolivia/27 de septiembre de 2016/Fuente: UNESCO

En el marco del fortalecimiento de la cooperación regional para la implementación efectiva de la Convención de la UNESCO de 1970 sobre las medidas que deben adoptarse para prohibir e impedir la importación, la exportación y la transferencia de propiedad ilícitas de bienes culturales, se realizó los días 19 y 20 de septiembre el “II Encuentro Binacional Ecuador – Bolivia sobre estrategias y procedimientos para la protección de bienes culturales patrimoniales”.

Este II Encuentro Binacional tuvo el objetivo de generar iniciativas sostenibles entre ambos países que permitan la transferencia de conocimientos y experiencias en el seguimiento de las directrices y los criterios prácticos de la Convención de 1970 como instrumento normativo a la disposición de los Estados Partes para proteger su patrimonio cultural. La Oficina de la UNESCO en Quito apoyó la participación de los delegados de Bolivia, Lupita Meneses Peña y Johnny Guerreros Burgoa, técnicos de la Unidad de Lucha contra el Tráfico Ilícito del Ministerio de Culturas y Turismo de Bolivia. También se sumaron a la delegación boliviana Julio César Alarcón Valdivia de INTERPOL Bolivia, Helmin Morales Áviles de la Aduana Nacional Boliviana y Omar Mokrani de la Embajada del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia en Ecuador.

El acto de inauguración estuvo a cargo de Juan Enrique Jurado Ruiz, Excelentísimo Embajador del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia en Ecuador, quien estuvo en compañía de Paola Carrera Ubidia, Directora de Coordinación de Asuntos Culturales, Desarrollo Social y Derechos Humanos del Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y Movilidad Humana; Lucía Chiriboga Vega, Directora Ejecutiva del Instituto Nacional de Patrimonio Cultural (INPC) y Pilar Páez del Ministerio de Cultura y Patrimonio.

El Embajador Jurado exhortó a los representantes y funcionarios de ambos países a continuar con los esfuerzos conjuntos en la lucha contra el tráfico ilícito de bienes culturales: “Desde el Estado tenemos la obligación de generar mecanismos efectivos que aseguren que nuestros pueblos no sean nunca más robados, en algo tan esencial como su identidad cultural”. Por su parte, Carrera Ubidia mencionó los esfuerzos de Ecuador para proteger su patrimonio del tráfico ilícito, destacando el trabajo del Comité Técnico Nacional de Lucha contra el Tráfico Ilícito de Bienes Culturales, el cual fue creado en 2010 y ha hecho posible la recuperación de más de 8000 piezas patrimoniales.

Durante las sesiones del evento se desarrolló una dinámica de trabajo que permitió el intercambio de experiencias y mejores prácticas entre las contrapartes de ambos países responsables de la protección del patrimonio cultural contra los efectos del tráfico ilícito, enfatizando los temas sobre las políticas públicas en vigor, las estrategias penales para la protección y recuperación de bienes patrimoniales, la implementación de la Convención de 1970 y los procedimientos policiales que se han puesto en marcha para la protección y la restitución de estos bienes Ecuador y Bolivia. Por último, se estableció una hoja de ruta de cooperación en el marco del Convenio Binacional para la protección, conservación, recuperación y restitución de bienes del patrimonio cultural, que hayan sido materia de robo, saqueo, transporte, tráfico y/o comercialización ilícitos, suscrito en el año 2013.

Fuente: http://www.unesco.org/new/es/media-services/single-view/news/ii_encuentro_binacional_ecuador_bolivia_sobre_estrategias_y/#.V-oMpYjhDIU

Imagen: www.elciudadano.gob.ec/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/museo-680×365.jpg

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Higher Education and Neoliberal Temptation: An Interview With Henry A. Giroux

Por Almantas Samalavicius , Eurozine

Educación Superior y la tentación neoliberal: Una entrevista con Henry A. Giroux

Si la universidad es para sobrevivir, los profesores van a tener que reconsiderar su papel como intelectuales públicos críticos, conecte su beca a los problemas sociales más amplios y aprender cómo escribir para y habla a un público más amplio. De esta cantidad, el crítico cultural y decano de la pedagogía crítica Henry Giroux está convencido.

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If the university is to survive, faculty are going to have to rethink their roles as critical public intellectuals, connect their scholarship to broader social issues and learn how to write for and speak to a broader public. Of this much, the cultural critic and doyen of critical pedagogy Henry Giroux is convinced.

Almantas Samalavicius: The neoliberal agenda that came into being a few decades ago in the northern hemisphere, and was eventually globalized, now seems to threaten systems of higher education worldwide. The persistence of this phenomenon has become alarming to many who care about its social consequences. As you have correctly and insightfully observed in your 2014 book Neoliberalism’s War on Higher Education, «a full-fledged assault is also being waged on higher education in North America, the United Kingdom and various European countries. While the nature of the assault varies across countries, there is a common set of assumptions and practices driving the transformation of higher education into an adjunct of corporate power and values.» Why is this agenda taking over societies that are so different from each other? What makes neoliberalism so overwhelmingly powerful and resistant to criticism as well as to social action? Why do governments give themselves up to neoliberal ideology, even if they claim to represent quite different ideological positions?

Henry Giroux: For all of its differences, neoliberalism brings together a number of elements that makes it appear almost insurmountable, if not universal, in its ability to normalize itself and convince the rest of the world that there is no alternative as Margaret Thatcher once argued.

First, it has created a new set of power relations in which power is global and politics is local. The financial elite now operate in the global flows of capital and have no allegiance to the nation-state or to the social contract that mediated between labour and capital in the post-war period. This separation points to a crisis of agency on the part of the state and a crisis of politics in terms of the ability to develop social formations that can challenge capital on a global rather than simply a local scale. The nation-state can no longer make concrete decisions on the economic level or create social provisions necessary to limit the effects of the market and offer the most basic services for people.

At the nation level, state sovereignty has been transformed into economic sovereignty. Governments don’t give themselves up, they have been hijacked by the institutions, power and wealth of the global elite. There is no way for states to challenge global forms of governance. We must remember that neoliberalism is very powerful not only because of its economic structures but also because of its pedagogical and ideological power. It not only consolidates wealth and power in different wars for the ultra-rich, it also controls all of those cultural apparatuses and pedagogical sites that function to produce identities, desires and values that mimic the market. In this sense it is a mode of governance that controls all of social life and not simply the market.

As a mode of governance, it produces identities, subjects and ways of life free of government regulations, driven by a survival of the fittest ethic, grounded in the idea of the free, possessive individual and committed to the right of ruling groups and institutions to accrue wealth removed from matters of ethics and social costs. As a policy and political project, neoliberalism is wedded to the privatization of public services, the selling off of state functions, the deregulation of finance and labour, the elimination of the welfare state and unions, the liberalization of trade in goods and capital investment and the marketization and commodification of society. As a form of public pedagogy and cultural politics, neoliberalism casts all dimensions of life in terms of market rationality.

As public higher education withers in a number of countries, either various policies of privatizing higher education are introduced or the logic of the market takes over. More and more universities and other institutions of higher education are being run as if they were large multinational companies seeking immediate profit; politicians and administrators speak out for efficiency, marketability of knowledge, institutional sensitivity and adaptability to the market, etc. What do you think will be the social and cultural price if this tendency continues to retain the upper hand? And do you see any possibilities to resist this global transformation of universities as well as higher education in general?

If this tendency continues, it will mean the death of critical thinking and higher education will simply become another ideological apparatus dedicated to training rather than education, stifling critical inquiry rather than nurturing it — and will narrow if not kill the imagination rather than cultivate it. One consequence will be that knowledge will be utterly commodified, students will be defined in utterly instrumental terms and the obligations of citizenship will be reduced to the private orbits of self-interest, consumption and commodification. This nightmare scenario will reinforce one of the central tendencies of totalitarianism; that is, a society dominated by thoughtlessness, stupidity and diverse modes of depoliticization.

In the United States and in many other countries, many of the problems in higher education can be linked to low funding, the domination of universities by market mechanisms, the rise of for-profit colleges, the intrusion of the national security state and the lack of faculty self-governance, all of which not only contradicts the culture and democratic value of higher education but also makes a mockery of the very meaning and mission of the university as a democratic public sphere. Decreased financial support for higher education stands in sharp contrast to increased support for tax benefits for the rich, big banks, military budgets and mega corporations. Rather than enlarge the moral imagination and critical capacities of students, too many universities are now wedded to producing would-be hedge fund managers, depoliticized students and creating modes of education that promote a «technically trained docility.»

Strapped for money and increasingly defined in the language of corporate culture, many universities are now driven principally by vocational, military and economic considerations while increasingly removing academic knowledge production from democratic values and projects. The ideal of the university as a place to think, to engage in thoughtful consideration, promote dialogue and learn how to hold power accountable is viewed as a threat to neoliberal modes of governance. At the same time, higher education is viewed by the apostles of market fundamentalism as a space for producing profits, educating a docile labour force and a powerful institution for indoctrinating students into accepting the obedience demanded by the corporate order.

However, it is crucial to remember that power is never without resistance and this suggests that faculty, students, unions and broader social movements must fight to regain higher education as a democratic public sphere. In addition, it must be made clear to a larger public that higher education is not simply about educating young people to be smart, socially responsible and adequately prepared for what ever notions of the future they can imagine, but that higher education is central to democracy itself.

Without the formative culture that makes democracy possible, there will be no critical agents, no foundation for enabling people to hold power accountable and no wider foundation for challenging neoliberalism as a mode of governance and political and ideological rationality. The struggle over higher education and its democratic misuse cannot be separated from the struggle to undo the reign of markets, neoliberalism and the ideologies informing this savage market fundamentalism. We see this struggle being taken up in precisely these terms in many countries in Latin America, the United Kingdom and the United States. Time will tell if they can spark a global movement to transform both higher education and the political and economic system that holds it hostage.

The American research university has been a model institution of higher education during the last half-century in many places of the globe. Despite the spectacular ascent of multiversity, proclaimed as early as 1963 by Clark Kerr in his famous book The Uses of the University, the production of research is in fact just one of the university’s functions. However, this function is taken for granted and even fetishized. Meanwhile, the teaching and education of informed, responsible citizens, capable of critical scrutiny as well as many of the other tasks of higher education, have been largely neglected and ignored. Do you see this imbalance in the functions of the university as threatening? What are the potential dangers of imagining the university exclusively as a research enterprise that relinquishes any commitment to teaching and cultivating a critical consciousness?

The role of research in the university cannot be separated from the modes of power that influence how research is defined and carried out. Under the reign of neoliberalism and given the encroaching power of the military-industrial complex, research is prioritized and rewarded when it serves the interests of the larger society. In this instance, research becomes armed and instrumentalized, serving largely the interests of powerful corporations or the ongoing death-machine of the military and its corporate allies. Research that matters informs teaching and vice versa. Universities are not factories and should not be defined as such. They are there to serve faculty, students and the wider community in the interests of furthering the public good. When the latter become subordinated to a research agenda that is simply about accumulating capital, the critical, moral and political essence of the university withers and everybody who believes in a democracy is marked for either failure, exclusion or punishment.

The corporate university is the ultimate expression of a disimagination machine, which employs a top-down authoritarian style of power, mimics a business culture, infantilizes students by treating them as consumers and depoliticizes faculty by removing them from all forms of governance. Clearly all of these defining relations produced by the neoliberal university have to be challenged and changed.

Traditionally, the university has been understood as community of scholars and students. However, there are multiple reasons for the university hardly existing any more in these terms. Back in the 1970s, the American social thinker Paul Goodman still articulated a vision of a community of scholars but during recent decades, academics either function simply as obedient personnel afraid to lose their diminishing rights and «privileges» (if there are any at all) or otherwise their collective voice is hardly heard. How can public criticism get back to where it should belong — i.e. in the universities?

The increasing corporatization of higher education poses a dire threat to its role as a democratic public sphere and a vital site where faculty can address important social issues, be self-reflective and learn the knowledge, values and ideas central to deepening and expanding the capacities required to be engaged and critical agents. Unfortunately, with the rise of the corporate university which now defines all aspects of governing, curriculum, financial matters and a host of other academic policies, education is now largely about training, creating an elite class of managers and eviscerating those forms of knowledge that conjure up what might be considered dangerous forms of moral witnessing and collective political action.

Many faculty have bought into this model because it is safe for them and they get rewarded. If the university is to survive, faculty are going to have to rethink their roles as critical public intellectuals, connect their scholarship to broader social issues and learn how to write for and speak to a broader public. Neoliberal modes of governance reinforce the worse dimensions of the university: specialisms, a cult of distorted professionalism, a narrow empiricism, unwillingness to work with others and a mode of scholarship steeped in obtuse and often mind-numbing discourse. All of this must change for faculty or they will not only be unable to defend their own labour as academics, they will continue to lose power to the corporate and managerial elite.

Higher education is intrinsically connected to what is usually termed as a public good, however, as you penetratingly observe «under the current regime of neoliberalism, schools have been transformed into a private right rather than a public good.» Do you think it is possible for higher education to reclaim its role in creating and providing a public good or at least providing a setting where a public good might be created? Under what conditions can are universities able to perform such a task? How can they get support from the public? Can one count on public intellectuals at all?

Universities are suffering from a crisis of legitimacy and a crisis of agency. If they are going to regain their role as a public good, faculty, students and other educational progressives are going to have to strongly challenge the current role of higher education. This means that faculty, students and various groups outside of the university are going to have to engage in a range of acts of civil disobedience extending from occupying classrooms to mobilizing larger populations in the street to force the hand of corporate power and its allies.

We saw this happen in Quebec a few years ago and such actions must be repeated on a global level. Public intellectuals are absolutely necessary to participate meaningfully in this role. We rarely hear about them but there are plenty of academics acting as public intellectuals, not only in the liberal arts, social sciences and humanities, but also in the health sciences where faculty are working closely with communities to improve the conditions of the often poor residents who reside in these communities. While public intellectuals can ask important questions, provide a critical language, help write policy and work with social movements, any real change will only come from the outside when social formations, educators and other progressive groups can force the hands of political power, governance and legislation.

Despite higher education’s present orientation toward the market and the reign of an ideology that glorifies the market even in those spheres where it is not supposed to and cannot work, what is your vision of the coming tendencies in higher education during the next decades? Do you expect the present trends concerning the marketization of higher education to be finally reversed? Or will we witness the final triumph of neoliberalism?

I am not optimistic but hopeful. That means, I don’t think progressive change will come by default, but only by recognizing the problems that have to be faced and then addressing them. The latter is a matter of real hope. The cruelty, barbarism and violence of neoliberalism is no longer invisible, the contradictions it produces abound and the misery it inflicts has become extreme. Out of the ashes will hopefully rise the phoenix of hope.

 ALMANTAS SAMALAVICIUS

Almantas Samalavicius tiene un Ph.D. en la historia y teoría del arte y es un profesor de la Universidad Técnica Vilnius Gediminas. Es autor de numerosos libros y ensayos sobre crítica cultural y literaria, la última de las cuales es, Ideas y Estructuras: Ensayos en Historia de la Arquitectura (2011). Además se ha traducido libros de Zygmunt Bauman y Gerard Delanty al lituano.

Fuente de la Entrevista:

http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/35956-higher-education-and-neoliberal-temptation

Fuente de la Foto:

Luke Jones ; Editado: LW / A

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Pedagogy of the Precariat

Interview

Haunted digital borders and alternative public spheres

Petar Jandrić: Thank you a lot for agreeing to this conversation, Henry! One of the central concepts in your work is border crossing, which “prompts teachers and students to raise new questions and develop models of analysis outside the officially sanctioned boundaries of knowledge and the established disciplines that control them” (Giroux and Searls Giroux, 2004: 102). This concept gains additional relevance with the advent of another border – the so-called electronic frontier (Rheingold, 1995). Could you please apply your concept of border crossing to learning in the age of information technologies?

Henry Giroux: When I first started thinking about the concept, one of the things that I was concerned with was the way in which various borders operate in various formations and ideological and political locations to basically shut people down from asking dangerous questions or pursuing questions outside of established paradigms. At the heart of that concern was the question of the political. How do you theorise the political in a world where borders are rapidly increasing? How do you theorise the political in a world where borders are really pushing people back into all kinds of silos – from those organised around prejudice and racism, to those organised around the instrumentalization of knowledge itself? And how are those borders organised in the ways that so limit what intellectuals and academics can do? At the university, academics often end up speaking in languages that are utterly abstract, languages that speak to five or six people. Therefore, it is hardly surprising that they have no sense what it means to speak to broader publics. At the same time, I was not arguing that difficult language is not sometimes necessary or that theory does not matter. On the contrary, I was arguing that theory needed to become worldly, unfettered by jargon, and be both accessible while addressing broader publics. Border crossing was a critique of theoreticism, theory for its own sake, unfettered by any interest in the larger world.

So the notion of border really took on several registers. One of the registers was political. How do you want to understand the notion of crossing borders in ways that expand the possibilities of people to be able to narrate themselves and understand the context in which they find themselves in order to, in some ways, both resist and overcome those kinds of barriers that shut down their capacity to be individual and social agents? The second issue is around the notion of social responsibility. What kinds of borders are put in play in ways that separate, for instance, instrumental knowledge from questions of social cost and larger social problems?

And I think, with regards to your question about how this applies to technology, that technologies are haunted by a ghostly presence to public memories rooted in a kind of mad instrumentalized culture of positivism and technological rationality. That presence extends everywhere from the genocide of Nazi Germany to the dominant instrumental rationalities of today. There is enormous sense that these rationalities can somehow be reproduced in a new language, but they still harbour positivist influences. And in lieu of these influences, they tend to remove themselves from ethical questions. So now the question is whether technology is efficient. Now the question is how you master technology, the question is how you open up new doors, behind which our perception of reality becomes understood in complex and general ways. Whereas for me, the real question is: What kinds of borders need to be erased and collapsed so that we can start arguing about the ways digital technology works to improve the human condition? How does digital technology open up possibilities and ways to solve real problems? What is the pedagogical function of digital technologies? In what ways does that pedagogy serve as a reminder of long-term technological potentials as opposed to what technologies can do in the short term?

When I say that digital technologies are haunted by the past – they are not just haunted by the past, they are also haunted by the present. They are haunted by the dark side of neoliberalism which wants to instrumentalize and subordinate everything to a regime of efficiency, profit making, privatisation, and deregulation. In many ways, that regime really short-circuits the potential that technologies have. So in that sense, the border crossing metaphor is useful. And in particular with the exposing a neoliberal logic that is overburdened by, what I think, is an instrumentalist logic. Remember, neoliberalism says: We do not deal with anything in the long term. We do not make long term investments. All we make are short-term investments. That is a pretty crippling and paralysing paradigm for people working with digital technologies. Because what it basically says is: Look, these technologies are going to be used to make money. That’s it. It does not matter how relevant they are, it does not matter whether they pollute the environment… that is all irrelevant. What really matters is the bottom line of profit making.

PJ: In Border Crossings, you write:

In effect, this is a call for educators and cultural workers to become border crossers engaged in an effort to create alternative public spheres. In my mind, alternative public spheres are central not only for creating the conditions for “the formation and enactment of social identities,” but also for enabling the conditions “in which social equality and cultural diversity coexist with participatory democracy.” (Giroux, 2005: 14)

Can you assess the notion of the Internet as an alternative public sphere? More precisely, what are its potentials for development of participatory democracy?

HG: I think that the Internet has an enormous potential for development of participatory democracy. However, I think that what needs to be unmasked immediately is the precept position that the Internet is equal to democracy. I think this position is just nonsense, because it erases the questions of politics, power, and control. Once you say that the Internet is a site of struggle, then you are on a different terrain. Then you do not merely link the Internet to simple forces of moral, social, and political reproduction, but you also link the Internet to the possibilities for trying to understand what it might mean on the side of emancipatory politics and possibilities. Put differently, the Internet is both situated within the existing historical conjuncture and the power relations that define it and at the same time there is the question of how the Internet can be understood as a source of resistance, an sphere capable of narrating new voices, modes of representations, and establishing cross border modes of communication and educational and political alliances.

In that sense, particularly in opening up alternative public spheres – where people can begin to write and say things that they could not do in the past – the potential of the Internet for democracy is enormous. Look, ten or fifteen years ago, many people on the left could not get published in liberal journals or in established academic publishers. All the major public and alternative spheres, rooted in print culture, refused to publish us. Our books were not reviewed, and my work in
americas-ed-deficit-300x449particular was not reviewed for years in any large circulated public or academic source. To this day The Nation, CommonDreams and other sites refuse to publish or reprint my work. What has happened in the last fifteen years is an entirely different story. There isTruthdig, Truthout, CounterPunch, Tikkun,and other websites that are publishing important work and opening up a space for a generation of theorists and public intellectuals who were once considered quite dangerous in the past, and whose work you could not find so easily. There is also a new generation of activists, especially black youth who are creating multiple public spheres through the Internet and other elements of the digital world.

I have attempted in the last decade to create a number of outlets online that offer an opportunity, especially for academics to publish their work to a broader audience. I created the online Public Intellectuals Project (2015) both at McMaster University and at Truthout. Personally, I now publish almost all of my essays, academic and more editorially oriented work most online. , and I publish a lot in places such as Truthout. My work is now published in Greek, Chinese, Spanish, and numerous other languages– and all over the world. This is only because of the Internet. People write to me ‘can I publish this’, and I say ‘absolutely’… I try to publish my work in as many sources as possible in order to reach as many diverse audiences as possible. I never charge for my work, because I think that it is a public service. I think this is what public intellectuals should do. If those social media, and networks, and technologies, did not exist, I would not be able to have a venue to be a public intellectual. I would simply not be there. I would be largely confined to in print culture, sending articles to liberal magazines who think that Obama is the essence of how to define progressive thought. So things have surely opened up. Look at Noam Chomsky – he writes an article practically every week, and his work is almost instantly spread over all over the globe. That is unbelievable. And all of a sudden, people all over the world know him as they have never known him before – because before the onset of the digital revolution he could not get published in the mainstream media, at least the vast majority of those outlets.

As the Internet opens important new public spheres, its presence presents new questions for your generation. Your generation cannot just simply learn how to read digital media critically. Your generation needs to learn how to produce digital media. Because the only way that the Internet is going to work for you is in alternative public spheres. It is not going to work in dominant public spheres, because they will not let you in. Or if they let you in, they will limit what you can do. I got interviewed the other day, in Toronto, in CBC. And the interviewer told me that he has a list of words he cannot use. How is that? And he is on the left. He cannot say fracking, and some other words related to oil… and in Canada!

PJ: By opening up new public spheres, the Internet opens – literally and metaphorically – pastures new and unexplored for the whole humankind. Recently, Ana Kuzmanić and I showed that transfer of various human activities online strongly resembles traditional colonialism, and briefly outlined some postcolonial opportunities for resistance (Jandrić, 2014; Jandrić & Kuzmanić, 2015). In a very different context, your work is also strongly related to postcolonial theory. Could you please outline the possible contributions of postcolonial theory in regards to the relationship of education and information technologies?

HG: I don’t consider myself a postcolonial theorists as much as it may be fair to say that some of the work I do is related hopefully to the best elements of that tradition. Postcolonial theory has made and is making enormous contributions around a number of things. First to reveal, and to make clear, how the West defines itself, and to expose all the ways in which the West takes for granted its own exceptionalism and its own colonialism, is an enormous intervention into the political. Postcolonial theory flips the script, and exposes how Western power relations have not been a force for democracy, in spite of the traditional claims, but a force for misery, exploitation, war, and diverse forms of violence. Post colonialism expands the political in ways that enable people to name oppression in new ways. And I think that is crucial. Second, postcolonialism helps people who have basically lost their voices, or their voices have been supressed, to speak in terms that highlight their stories, sense of agency, and possibilities for collective struggles. It provides them with the ability to narrate themselves from the position of strength, and not from the position of weakness. And I think that is crucial. Third, particularly in relation to digital technologies, postcolonialism offers new possibilities for dialogue between people who are part of the West and the people who are not. And I think that creates a space for new kinds of inspiring, energizing, and collective alliances in the name of radical democracy.

The biggest problem with postcolonial theory – and this is a problem with every political theory – is that you need to be careful about political purity. There is a tendency in this broad based theoretical project to err on the side of political purity. Oppression does not offer political guarantees. History, public memory, and justice have to be struggled over and emerge by taking a detour through informed judgments, history, and theory. I think that focusing on differences, while essential, sometimes can fracture, in really detrimental ways, the possibility for broader social movements and broader political interventions. And I think that postcolonial theory has to deal with this, as do all theoretically defined political movements. Theorists such as Angela Davis (2012) understand this. However, there are lot of identity-based movements that are caught in political silos where these questions of certainty, political purity, and guarantee, sometimes go too far and become counterproductive. I think that postcolonialism – in all of its diversity – needs to be a dialogue that is not only in touch with the West. As a mode of critique, postcolonialism needs to be in touch with itself, in terms of the ability to be self-reflective about its own potential drawbacks.

Cultural studies in and for the age of digital cultures

PJ: A prominent place in your recent work is linked to the zombie metaphor and to the culture of cruelty (Giroux, 2011). Following the long tradition of inquiry into relationships between technology and human behaviour (i.e. Arendt, 1998), can you assess the role of information technology in the culture of cruelty?

HG: Information technology is not purely instrumental in the culture of cruelty because it is a question of how technology gets used in ways to reproduce that culture. Therefore, the real question for me is: How do digital technologies become complicit in acts of injustice, barbarism, and exploitation? Remember, information technologies operate within a set of particular political and social formations, and often take their cue from those formations. When you live in a culture which tells you that the only thing that matters is the ‘survival of the fittest’ ethic, that social Darwinism is the way that we should deal with each other, and that social combat is more important than social solidarity, you will find that technologies are open to an enormous abuse. Whether we talk about bullying, whether we talk about people who hide behind anonymity, or whether we talk about people who write dreadful comments about articles – comments that sometimes become so dreadful that I just stopped reading them. Or, for that matter a criminogenic finance culture that uses the new technologies and high speed computers to produce massive trades and engage in large scale corruption.

When I look at Fox News – that is the culture of cruelty. That is a culture of lies, misrepresentation, and cruelty. With the advent of the Internet, however, we need to be more attentive to that question, because technology has made it easier to hide and to be cruel at the same time. I think that people need to be really aware of this enormous influence in the new online cultural apparatuses that make up mainstream screen culture. Manufactured ignorance is the DNA of mainstream screen culture, spewing out hate, racism, misinformation, all the while engaging in a spectacle of violence and justifying American exceptionalism. As we all know, young people kill themselves because of online bullying! The far right uses digital technology in ways that are mind-blowing, because your question is actually predicated on another question. Your question is predicated on the educative role that the technology plays – on the fact that technology is basically a form of education. So the links between information technology and the culture of cruelty must reach far beyond simple instrumental logic and be deeply concerned with matters of power, wealth, economic control, etc. When you understand that, then the question becomes: What kind of education is at work here? How does that culture of cruelty get taken up and what are its effects. Listen to the racist rants by right wing fanatics such as Ann Coulter and the commentators on Fox News or read David Brooks in the New York Times who argues that poverty is the result of the poor not adopting middle class moral values. This stuff is more than ignorance, it is dangerous because it is distributed through powerful cultural apparatuses that produce modes of public pedagogy that shape identities, values, and desires.

PJ: In my opinion, your conclusion that technology is basically a form of education should be one of the basic pillars of contemporary critical pedagogy – and it requires as much dedicated attention as it can get. Can you please expand on it?

HG: Absolutely! How is anything that is cultural in its essence, also not in essence pedagogical? The Internet is a form of pedagogy, because it both produces knowledge and facilitates the exchange of knowledge and communications; it deals with the ongoing exchange and legitimation of values, it deals with dialogue, it deals with ways in which people produce meaning. As soon as we begin to talk about the production of meaning, we are also talking about the production of identities. So it seems to me that the Internet is just like other, narrower forms of education in that it is always part of a larger struggle over knowledge, power, modes of representation, and how the future is to be defined. What you really have here is the struggle over modes of identity, modes of agency, modes of social formations, modes of the political. In that sense, the Internet is enormously political and educational, and I would go further and argue that is one of areas that is least analysed.

There is too little understanding of the educative nature of such technologies. They are educative in the most fundamental political sense. They have an enormous reach, they have enormous power, they influence enormous amounts of people, and they constitute a power element of how the political is constituted. One could argue that the ways people now read society, read culture, read politics, is almost entirely now through the Internet. My students, for the most part, they do not read print culture any more. They say they do, but the vast majority of time they are online for hours on end. There are studies now showing that kids use digital technologies almost eleven hours per day (Rideout, Foehr and Roberts, 2010)!

PJ: Mainstream critical pedagogy usually talks about schools and schooling. However, as people such as Ivan Illich (1971) and Everett Reimer (1971) have shown almost half a century ago, schooling is very different from human learning. Now, there is no doubt that the Internet offers a huge amount of information. Could you please relate access to information with access to learning? More precisely, could you please assess contemporary potentials for deschooling society through information technologies?

HG: If Ivan Illich’s Deschooling today is read as an attack on public schools, the argument aids the right wing attack on all things public, but if it points to other sites of education outside of institionalized schooling as sites of potential learning and struggle, I think it is useful. That said, I think public and higher education are under attack by the neoliberal avengers and the religious fundamentalists, at least in the United States and United Kingdom. So the real question is: If schools are under attack, what is it about them that seems so dangerous? And that question already provides a part of the answer. A part of the answer is that schools are public – they represent public spheres. A part of the answer is that schools offer the possibility for people to engage in dissent – to learn how to be critically engaged agents. School offer the possibility for dialogues, insights, knowledge that are impossible to get access to elsewhere. And schools often produce modes of sociality that are dangerous – where people work together, where people work collectively. I never liked the more limited notion of deschooling. I did not think that the issue was whether we should do away with public schools. I thought there were two issues. First, we should do everything to retain public schools and make them stronger, because they are absolutely vital to any democracy. Second, we have to broaden the notion of education, so that it is not restricted strictly to schools.

PJ: Such broadening is closely related to culture. Hence, it is hardly surprising that a lot of your work overlaps with the field of Cultural Studies. What happens to Cultural Studies in the age of digital cultures?

HG: Cultural Studies has always been concerned with the question how culture deploys power and vice versa. Information technologies add a different register to this question. So the register now is not just how culture in the traditional sense deploys power, but also how new information technologies and the spaces they are producing can be used in ways that are both political and pedagogical. Stuart Hall, just before he died, insisted that Cultural Studies was not there to produce high theory. Cultural studies was here to address the important social problems (Hall, 1980). So the question then becomes: How do information technologies become helpful in addressing important social problems? What modes of evaluation can we bring to information technologies in order to really understand and criticise what they do and what they do not do? How can they produce a language of critique and possibility which touches people lives, provides modes of identification, and points to new social and political possibilities?

PJ: A lot of your work is focused to the social role of teachers. Since your book Teachers as Intellectuals: Toward a Critical Pedagogy of Learning (1988), however, digital technologies have radically transformed our social landscapes – and, I would assume, such transformations cannot leave your analyses intact. Can you describe the notion of teachers as public intellectuals in and for the age of digital cultures?

HG: It really began somewhere in the 1990s, when all of a sudden the Internet explodes and changes the ways how knowledge is brought, produced, distributed and circulated. This placed all kinds of new responsibilities on the intellectuals. So they now needed not only to address important social problems, but they also need to address these problems in ways to get their work known – so that it might have an impact. There are people who are pushing the boundaries of particular kinds of knowledge, and they do important things that are strictly within their field. For instance, Susan Searls Giroux works a lot with health science people, and the results of this work are really impressive. New kinds of knowledge help people without access to open various doors, and that is important. However, I do not know what it means to be an educator and engage in any kind of scholarship without addressing the important social problems.

I think that the question we need to ask is: What kind of urgency now demands that we need people to master digital technologies? Given the attempt to eliminate the public intellectuals and to replace them with anti-public intellectuals, this question is particularly interesting. And not only that, I guess that another important question needs to be raised. Intellectuals per se need spaces to produce their work. They need to be able to justify the conditions of own labour. And the way that such justification needs to be done, I would think, is to make an appeal to the fact that their labour, in some way, addresses important public issues. And I think that information technology is absolutely essential in doing that.

PJ: In this series of articles, I held conversations with many of your dear friends and colleagues – Michael Peters, Peter McLaren… Writing up your biographies, one by one, I noticed an interesting pattern. After obtaining your first degrees, most of you had been working between five and ten years in primary or secondary education before embarking en route towards critical pedagogy and the academy. What is the role of your teaching experience in your academic work? How close or remote are you today from classroom trenches?  

HG: When I was teaching in high school, I was just a young man who wanted to help young kids. That is why I wanted to teach. And I started using modes of teaching s that, in some way, I viewed as strictly methodological. They were not political for me. I used them to learn how to give lectures, how to repeat questions, how to test knowledge, that sort of thing. But I very early on found myself teaching in a largely poor school inhabited my minorities of class and colour, in which all the rules which suggested that pedagogy was an a priori exercise or methodologically driven completely evaporated, as the students just completely ignored the context in which such pedagogy found itself. I needed to think theoretically through what that all meant. And for me, that was the beginning of an exercise in what it meant to be able to theorize, the experiences that I was having. In terms of where I actually went in respect to questions of education, I think it had an enormous impact on me. From that point on, I recognized that matters of context mattered. Pedagogy begins with problems that arise in particular contexts, material, ideological, and ethical. And it is in those connections that as a teacher we learn to make education first meaningful in order to make it critical and transformative.

I never divorced education from questions of democracy, and I never divorced education from larger issues around questions about the development of agency, about the development of politics, the development of social values, modes of social responsibility, and ways of theorizing different kinds of pedagogical interventions. So that was the beginning for me. That was the groundwork. Actually, that was the experience which jolted me into a kind of theoretical world that I could not ignore if I wanted to take school experience seriously and if I wanted to be able to articulate that experience to others.

Digital imagination machines against the violence of organised forgetting

PJ: In an interview with Victoria Harper about your recent book The Violence of Organized Forgetting: Thinking Beyond America’s Disimagination Machine (2012), you said: “We live in a historical moment when memory, if not critical thought itself, is either under attack or is being devalued and undermined by a number of forces in American society” (Harper, 2014). However, the Internet has brought the direct opposite of forgetting – the hive mind remembers so many things, and in such detail, that it becomes harder and harder to escape own history. Obviously, organised forgetting works on much subtler levels than mere access to information – as you say, it is about depolitization, and lack of critical thinking, and even pure ignorance. What is the role of information technologies in the struggle against organised forgetting? How can they transform our cultural apparatuses from “disimagination machines” into “imagination machines”?

HG: Remember, digital technologies have the tendency to be 24/7. They operate in a space of highly intense speed and in doing so produce huge amounts of information that make it all the more difficult to assess knowledge critically. In many ways, what we are seeing are students, who are using digital technologies in a way so rapidly, and consuming so quickly, that what gets erased are the conditions for what we might call the extra-sizing memory. So that instead of memory, we get assaulted by information, and we quickly try to figure out exactly what it means. I think that simply because something stays online, or simply because something goes into data storage (for instance, in the National Security Agency (NSA), which stores everything) – that is not memory. That is about retrieval.

So I think that the real questions here are: First, in what way do we have to learn how to engage digital technology, so that it is not constantly engaged in a kind of endless erasure of informed judgment that is no longer present in the most immediate of moments? How do we learn from the past? And how do we move away from the surface? And the other question is: In what ways do digital technologies hold the promise of reclaiming public memory? Digital technologies carry the inherent promise of reclaiming public memory. They develop archives, they offer huge amounts of knowledge, and they control access… But the real question here is that public memory is not just simply, about making information available but what kind of information matters and makes a difference in people’s lives for the better. The question is: What are the larger political conditions that would take public memory seriously in the first place and hence shape digital technologies in ways in which they can contribute to that expanding the possibilities for a global democracy?

When I say that many digital technologies engage as dis-imagination machines, what I means is that they are often used to shut down knowledge considered dangerous to oppressive authorities. . They censor. They leave information out. They distort. They function under surface. They do not talk about historical narratives. They do not even talk about history as a liberating force. For instance, many school systems in the United States are rewriting curricula to support a neoliberal view of the world while at the same time eliminating the work of historians like Howard Zinn and others considered to be harbingers of dangerous memory. In many ways they talk about the present as an ever-ending machine of consumption. I think that you never want to forget, as many people have said, that all those questions need to be understood within the existing social and political formations. So the final question is: What formations are at work to distort digital technologies, in a world where questions of memory become at least irrelevant if not dangerous?

PJ: In Empire, Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri have shown that internalisation was “a key component of proletarian struggles and progressive politics in general” (2001: 49) – the word even ended up as the working class anthem! Nowadays, however, the tables have turned, and contemporary precariat conceives globalisation and weakening of the nation state as the main causes of its oppression. In words of Hardt and Negri,

[o]ne might be tempted to say that proletarian internationalism actually “won” in light of the fact that the powers of nation-states have declined in the recent passage toward globalization and Empire, but that would be a strange and ironic notion of victory. It is more accurate to say, following the William Morris quotation that serves as one of the epigraphs for this book, that what they fought for came about despite their defeat. (ibid: 50)

Certainly, globalisation in the beginning of 21st century is very different from internationalism of the late 19th century. Nevertheless, contemporary precariat and ancient proletariat seem to share a similar tension between the local and the global. Could you please assess the tension between the national and the international in the context of contemporary critical pedagogy?

HG: I think that the greatest tension is something that we could never have imagined twenty years ago: the separation of power from politics. As Zygmunt Bauman has pointed out in a number of books, politics is local, and power is global. So what we have is a new kind of politics, in which the financial elites have no allegiance whatsoever to the social contract. They make no concession and at the same time politics, the ability to see what needs to be done is removed from the power to do it. And it seems, while problems new global elite produce often impacts different localities in very specific ways, and yet there is no way that these problems are going to be solved except on a global level. They are not going to be solved in any other way. You can resolve certain aspects of these issues in terms of short-term projects. For instance, we can reduce carbon output in Chicago – which is helpful. But the fact of the matter is that sustainable long-term solutions really need a politics that is both global, and a politics that is international.

Now, does that at the same time mean that the nation-state has disappeared? I think that is nonsense. I think that the nation state has been reconfigured in terms of its punitive and punishing qualities, as opposed to its social qualities. That is, the social state dies, because the global financial elite have no interest in investing in the social state because they do not believe the state has a responsibility to the social contract or for that matter any social responsibility whatsoever. What you have in its place is a state that has given up its sovereignty to corporate interests, and it now enforces corporate rules. That is the punishing state. Increasingly, the punishing state is what we are seeing, especially in the U.S. in the forms of a proliferation of state violence ranging from, the militarization of the local police to the militarization of schools, social services, and other public spheres. The punishing state is also based on mass surveillance, and on austerity measures that do everything in their power to basically transfer the immiseration and the misery caused by the punishing state onto working class people and the poor. So that is why the issue of disposability is something we never talked about in a way that we need to talk about now – because it includes a whole range of people, unlike it has in the past.

Almost fifty percent of young people in Greece, Spain, Croatia, and many other countries, are unemployed (Dietrich, 2012). These are the major issues. And in my estimation, what role the state will play in the future is problematic. But it is certainly not going to play the role it played in the past. I think the question of social democracy is dead. And I will tell you why. It is dead because social democracy argues for social provisions. As opposed to social democracy, radical democracy argues for redistribution of wealth, which is much more radical and much more necessary. You cannot have the 80 richest people in the world now control as much as the globe! What do you say about that, in terms of its impact on everything? You have a financial elite now, who are buying land in New Zealand, and buying airplanes and landing stripes, because they would rather escape, they think, then do anything to deteriorate suffering they caused on the global level. That is unbelievable! That is beyond the culture of cruelty! That represents a kind of political and social psychosis produced by casino capitalism and its neoliberal offshoots, however diverse they might be.

PJ: Let us move back from global to local. Your working-class background has strongly shaped your academic work. As you said, however, the traditional notions of working class and middle class are nowadays quickly disappearing…

HG: They are disappearing in two ways that I find interesting. First, when I hear candidates in the United States talking about how radical they are, you know what they say? “We are going to save the middle class.” And I often think, what happened to the working class? Are they so disposable, subject to a politics of erasure that they have even disappeared from the vocabulary? Are they so gone, that they are not even considered as agents of possibility, agents of investment, agents of change? Second, you have a lot of Marxists who want to believe that the question of historical agency is unproblematic, and that the workers of the world will rise up again. I think that belief is a bit overstated to the point that I do not even know where to begin with it! The workers are important in terms of any struggle – absolutely. But labour unions have become weakened, worker organisations have been dissipated, and I think that the real issue here is how we might link up workers and worker movements with social movements. Podemos did this is Spain, right? Syriza did this in Greece. What does this model teach us about a new kind of politics in which the very notion of alliances gets reworked, reinvented and becomes more expansive and willing to create a broad based political formation.

PJ: Peter McLaren’s argument, in brief, is that the working class has not disappeared – instead, it has merely relocated to the global South. Indeed, the working class barely exists in the global North these days – but that does not mean that the working class does not exist at all. (McLaren and Jandrić, 2014: 807)

HG: Peter is not entirely wrong – there certainly is a more politically conscious working class in Mexico, and Latin America, and Africa. But I think the real question here is: What have we learned from the failures of political movements that have been only relying only on worker movements? Where have these movements succeeded without getting into avant-gardism, without developing party systems that basically become absorbed in labour unions? I do think that no movement can exclude labour – that is impossible. But labour is not enough – that is my point. And, as Susan Searls Giroux often points out (2010), there is no guarantee that workers will indeed move to the left.

PJ: Actually, in Europe and in the United States, they seem to be moving to the right…

HG: Absolutely! And I think this global movement of workers towards the right, once again, speaks to the viability of the educative nature of politics. The left has to take seriously what workers’ needs are, and how to explain those needs to workers, in ways that are meaningful, critical and transformative. Just look, for instance, what has happened in France, with an influx of Muslim populations, when workers do not have a language to understand important events in critical and political terms? What happens to workers? They become fascists! That is what happens to them! This is really an important issue for the left.

What kind of work would that take? What does it mean not to just celebrate and romanticise workers, but also to recognise that, in lieu of changing historical and political conditions and colorations, we are losing workers? Politically, the left is losing workers – workers are becoming a force for the right. How do you want to talk about that? What demands does that make, pedagogically and politically? In what way does such loss force us to rethink the very nature of politics? And in what ways does it force us to rethink the very nature of the relationships between education and politics?

PJ: All around the world, we are witnessing growing polarisations: between the rich and the poor, between the debtors and the indebted, between the political right and the political left… Such growth of social polarisations cannot be sustained for much longer – and the humankind needs to reconcile about important issues such as the environment, access to resources, etc. Giddens and his ‘Third Way’ politics (Giddens, 2000) have definitely been exposed as right-wing and detrimental (Callinicos, 2001). Do you see any common ground for wide consensus about issues relevant for the whole humanity?

HG: There are three issues, to me, that are in play here. First is the ecological issue. If this continues, they will destroy the planet – that is for sure. Second, nation states now need to engage in permanent war economies as a part of the punishing status they created internationally. So the second great problem is around the possibility of the nuclear war – in Ukraine, Russia, we see all this Cold War rhetoric emerging once again. The third issue is massive poverty, in which resources are so concentrated in the hands of the rich. Here, the inequality becomes so overwhelming, and the distinction between the rich and the poor extends to such a degree, that you have traditional working class and middle class entirely disappearing. So you end up with what the Citigroup calls the plutonomy (Ajay, Macleod, and Singh, 2005 & 2006). On one level, there is the financial elite, and then there is the precariat, which is pretty much everybody else (Chomsky, 2012). Globally, the 1% vs. the 99% is not a fictional figure – it is stark reality.

Towards a pedagogy of the precariat

PJ: As a common result of these trends, the precariat is quickly becoming an important social force – even in traditional bastions of the middle class such as the academy. Would you agree with Guy Standing that the precariat needs to develop own class identity (Standing, 2014; Standing and Jandrić, 2015)? What is the role of information and communication technologies in development of such identity? What are the main similarities and differences between pedagogy of the oppressed and pedagogy of the precariat?

HG: That is an important question. I think that a pedagogy of the precariat suggests that you are talking about a pedagogy that recognises new distinctive economic, political and social registers. A pedagogy that is no longer rooted complete in 20th century formations, but in the 21st century. A pedagogy that takes on particularly the savagery of the regime of neoliberalism that has really altered the deck around the assault on the public, the assault on unions, youth, public goods, the environment, public values, and democracy itself. In many ways, the regime of neoliberalism has developed a public pedagogy rooted in poisonous values such as the unbridled belief in market values, radical individualism, and unchecked competition that so limits human possibilities by undermining all notions of the public, solidarity, the support for the common good, and care for others. In this form of market fundamentalism, human agency is reduced to a form of social combat and human relations mimic the logic of exchange values, promoting only matters of self-interest. Such a reduction of human agency operates in ways which suggest that Paulo Freire’s notion of pedagogy as always unfinished holds an enormously important number of insights. Like any social theory, like any ideology, like any worldview, critical pedagogy needs to adjust to circumstances in which it finds itself. And at this historical moment we find ourselves in a historical conjuncture is that is quite distinctive in that finance capital now governs all of the major institutions of the United States, including the government, and the market is viewed as the a template for governing all social relations, not just the economy. I think that Paulo Freire would be the first to agree with the importance of understanding pedagogy as both a practice of freedom and as a powerful force for domination particularly as it currently relates to this current market driven historical conjuncture. You know, near the end of his life, Paulo did start talking about neoliberalism (Roberts, 2003).

PJ: So, how might we educate the next generation of Freirean teachers, scholars, social and political researchers?

HG: Maybe the best way is to try and understand that there has been an enormous shift in the ethical foundation for understanding and making pedagogy central to politics itself. Critical pedagogy is now seen as dangerous in its ability to create critically engaged citizens and its willingness to hold power accountable. It gets worse. We have infinite tolerance for bankers and financial elites, and we have zero tolerance for teachers, whistle-blowers, and anyone else willing to stand up, take a risk, and challenge the crisis of authority that we find ourselves in. Schools with their high stakes testing model have instituted a pedagogy of repression which when coupled with the curse of student debt on at the level of higher education is a recipe for killing off the potential of the radical imagination in an entire generation of students. Pedagogically, the question is: Why are we supporting an educational system that is based on oppression? We are not talking just about questions of evaluation – we are talking about genuine forms of critical and creative learning that educators students to address real problems and learn how to govern rather than be governed. Your generation needs to pay close attention to how oppression works not just structurally but also through the realm of ideas, knowledge, that is, intellectually. You need to comprehend how oppression works along a variety platforms and registers from schooling to a range of other cultural apparatuses – whether it is about intimidation, the imposition of a culture of fear, a politics of surveillance, ongoing forms of depolitization, or whether it is about the rise of the punishing state and the criminalisation of social behaviour. We need to understand these things through five major registers.

The first register is that we need to develop the analytical skills to know what this system does to people and how it works. Neoliberal capitalism is buttressed through a variety of fundamentalisms: economic, military f, educational and religious … we need to understand this. We need to understand the workings of these modes of oppression and how they interact with each other as ideologies, modes of governance, policies, and pedagogical discourses. If we do not understand them, we cannot challenge them. We need, in some way, to find ourselves thinking, acting, and working with a new understanding of the relationships between politics, power, and knowledge.

Second, we need to revive radical imagination. We need both the language of critique and the language of hope as a way to reimagine the promise of a radical democracy and the myriad conditions necessary to support it. . We need to allow people to realize that capitalism is not all there is. That there is something else. That one cannot act otherwise, unless one can think otherwise. If we want to talk about Paulo Freire, let us be honest. Paulo was the guy who did not believe in reform. He believed in radical change! Paulo was not about reforming capitalist systems. He was about destroying them! He was about getting rid of them! Paulo talked about systems that worked because they are not built on massive amounts of inequity, inequality, wealth, and power. He understood that. So Paulo’s notion of education was not simply about critical thinking. It was about conscientization – the move to educate in order to equip people with a sense of agency that that is collective and transformative. Paulo Freire understood the need to work with others and reclaim the questions of solidarity. For him, the pedagogical was always at the centre of the notion of solidarity.

Third, one of the things that need to be done in the name of Freirean understanding of politics is creating the new language for politics. As teachers, public intellectuals, writers, journalists, we need to create educational spaces in which we can generate these new vocabularies about freedom, trust, justice, equality, the public good, and the commons. The neoliberal pedagogical machine has subverted these terms by either distorting their meaning as when they define freedom as the freedom to consume or when they disparage them as in their disdain for all public values. And one of our obligations is to simply stop saying that we need to educate young people to be critically literate. Instead, we need to educate young people to be cultural producers, active agents for whom knowledge is linked to not simply a broader awareness of literary, cultural, and scientific treasures but to an expansion of one’s sense of individual and social agency. It is not enough to read culture critically. It is not enough to say: We know how to read digital media. People need the ability to read digital media, for sure, but they also need to be able to produce digital media. They need to produce radio, television, and online programs that speak to real issues in a variety of genres.. They need to produce own journals. And some of them are already doing it! Because, without those skills, inside mainstream media, the people will be silenced.

Fourth, we need to teach people to have one foot in and one foot out. Never give your soul to the institution! Because they will dement your sense of agency, hope, and make you cynical and ultimately complicit with their own limited visions. When we understand that, we will be freer to act within these institutions to create the spaces that matter. Spaces of disruption. Spaces of resistance. Spaces in which we can model for young people what it means to speak up and take risk. Spaces in which we can eliminate islamophobia, the attack on immigrants and the demonization of the other. Spaces where we can speak about the violence that goes on in poor neighbourhoods and spaces where we can work in those neighbourhoods.

Finally, we need new political formations. I do not believe in the Republican and in the Democrat party. They are business parties. They are the heart and soul of corporate business and financial interests. So to expect that Hilary Clinton or Bernie Sanders will somehow address the question of finance capital and its influence on either party is a cruel joke.

PJ: Can you link these registers to information and communication technologies?

HG: Technological decisions are essentially normative and political. However, because of highly specialised knowledge in the field of engineering, important decisions have often been done without proper public consultation. Now that we are witnessing catastrophes arising from advances in plundering the earth’s resources and their consequences such as global warming, technical questions are getting much more public attention. Unfortunately, the general population to often construct opinions on incomplete data and knowledge. So I think that more and more people in the technological community need to be aware of normative and political aspects of their work. Moreover, the general population should have much more knowledge about technology. Linking the two is an enormously important project for contemporary critical pedagogy.

Many engineers are concerned with issues around privacy and security, and it is really important to have both the engineering skills and the language to be able to talk about these questions. The biomedical community is trying to create an interface to holistically understand the opportunities offered by technologies. There is no recourse to determine where life begins, where the machine ends, and what value is there in the production of zombies – people who have really low quality of life. In Europe, I think, there is a bit more attentiveness to these questions. Having said that, the engineers and activists have recently started working on a wide range of technical solutions for these problems. Unfortunately, they are still far from mainstream, and we need to work hard to push these questions and practices into mainstream.

PJ: A lot of your work is directly linked to the U.S. This is hardly a surprise, as you have clearly and continually asserted the importance of context. However, few decades after the end of the Cold War, contexts that characterised the 20th century are rapidly changing, and we are witnessing another historical large-scale regrouping. As Europe gets closer and closer to the U.S., Russia is on the rise, and Southeast Asia is about to become the largest world’s producer of goods and user of natural resources such as oil. What needs to be done in respect to these developments? How can we make the message of critical pedagogy truly trans-national?

HG: I do believe that critical pedagogy offers a number of developments that are enormously crucial, and that people need to address. Critical pedagogy does take up the question of power and education. It does suggest that education in some ways is a moral and political practice. It does suggest that questions of context matter. It does speak about the role of education as a part of struggle over producing particular kinds of futures and particular kinds of identities. And it does mark the political as the one that suggests that the role of educating people is not just about creating good workers – that is training. So I think that critical pedagogy offers an enormous number of elements that are very important, very crucial, and I think – like anything else – that critical pedagogy evolves, as it incorporates new dimensions and takes on new different issues. These are important general principles that need to be understood within the specificity of particular contexts.

PJ: You completed your doctorate in education in 1977 – much before information technology has entered mass production. Nowadays, in 2015, we clearly live in the information society. As someone who has actively shaped contemporary critical pedagogy during these turbulent social transformations, could you please assess the relationships between information technologies and education from a historical perspective?

HG: We need to be careful about romanticising any technology in ways which might suggest that it wipes out the past. The idea that information technology is such a rupture from the past that the past no longer seems relevant – that idea just seems incredibly ignorant to me. To subscribe to that idea implies the inability to understand the impacts of the railroad, or the telegraph, or the printing press, and the ways they fundamentally changed the way the world functions. More importantly, to subscribe to that idea is to ignore the way in which societies are organised around technologies that truly produce massive societal change. People who celebrate digital technologies without the benefit of any public memory or historical consciousness need examine the massive changes various technologies caused in the past. What can we learn from these changes to try and understand the role that other technologies might play in the future?

One thing we can learn, for sure, is that the degree to which various technologies were taken over by the concentration of wealth is also the degree to which these technologies are abused and serve very narrow individual, political, and financial interests. The degree to which various technologies are taken over by forms of state monopolies, like in the Soviet Union, is the degree to which these technologies are abused. The way in which the Internet is up for grabs by corporate interests is indicative that such technologies cannot escape from the question of power and inequality. So it seems that studies of information and communication technologies really can learn from the question: How do we insert the notion of democracy into their language?

We hear all this stuff about the wonder of information technologies, right? But we do not hear enough about other important questions. First, people are constantly going online and giving up their privacy rights. They can’t run fast enough from privacy– privacy is like a burden to them. In giving up their privacy, they become complicit with the surveillance state. Second, we have got a state that is now implementing all kinds of technologies around education in ways that I find dangerous. Putting monitors on kids to register their emotions, and to measure how they respond to certain stimuli in classes (Sung et al., 2005) – this is truly dystopian. New technologies now drive the circle of production and consumption, and they turned it into a 24/7 tornado. Questions of buying, consuming, and disposability, have been accelerated to such a degree that we are getting closer and closer to destroying the planet – to say the least. In the midst of that question, there is inference for romanticisation of technologies, and we witness some of the darkest moments in an authoritarian politics that we have seen since the 1930s. So, the question is certainly not about how wonderful digital technology is. The question here, I would think, is: Given the wonderful potentials that digital technology has, how and why is it now being used in such an abusive way, by whom, and whose interests does it serve. And how might we understand this as central to a new form of totalitarianism?

PJ: In the best tradition of critical pedagogy, you have always radiated optimism – even when dealing with tough topics such as the culture of oppression and violence. What is the underlying source of your optimism? Where do you gather strength for your positive attitude towards the future?

HG: Because I refuse to become complicitous with the dominating and death dealing forces that surround me! And I think that becoming complicitous is when you become cynical or worse. I cannot imagine not imagining different futures. I cannot imagine that people cannot rise up, even in the mist of the worst forms of domination. I cannot imagine that people cannot recognize that history is open and that power is never simply synonymous with domination. Marx said, amongst the many fabulous things, that history is open (Marx, 1973). And I believe that! I do not believe that history is closed. I do not believe that history just marches on unchanged by human beings. Of course, you have to struggle for agency – but this is exactly what Marx always said, and what a number of people have said. So, I really believe in the question of struggle. I believe in human ability to imagine a different future and to form future conditions through various forms of collective and political struggle. I believe that the contradictions have become so great, that resistance is not simply a possibility, one choice among man – it is hard wired into what it means to recognize that human beings are unfinished and that history does not simply repeat itself.

Petar Jandrić teaches at the University of Applied Sciences in Zagreb, Croatia.

Henry A. Giroux currently holds the McMaster University Chair for Scholarship in the Public Interest in the English and Cultural Studies Department and a Distinguished Visiting Professorship at Ryerson University. His most recent books are America’s Education Deficit and the War on Youth (Monthly Review Press, 2013) and Neoliberalism’s War on Higher Education (Haymarket Press, 2014). His web site is www.henryagiroux.com.

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Pedagogy of the Precariat

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