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- Title
Revolutionizing Academic Activism: Transpraxis, Critical Pedagogy, and Justice for a People Yet to Be.
- Authors
Arrigo, Bruce; Bersot, Heather
- Abstract
One strain of thought that is both consistent with and an amplification of academic activism (Belknap in Criminology 53(1):1-22, 2015) is the critical criminological literature on transpraxis. As a theory of change, transpraxis advances a thesis on the dialogical and relational pedagogy of mutual struggle, of shared being and becoming. In addition, this literature critiques the dominant philosophy of human risk management and the current culture of captivity politics in which the struggle for transformative (i.e., interdependent and collective) change is 'finalized.' We argue that, in the present era, processes of humanness and expressions of culture de-vitalize (e.g., homogenize, normalize, territorialize) this existence. In so doing, humanness and culture tend toward Hegelian reaction-negation dynamics, thereby forestalling and/or foreclosing justice for an awaiting people. Accordingly, this article outlines the dimensions of transpraxis as theory, explains how revolutionary academic activism necessitates a critical pedagogy for a people yet to be, and it reconceives the educational terrain of criminological activism as the pedagogy of becoming. We argue that the transpraxis properties of this pedagogy facilitate revolutionary academic activism and further the radical potential of transformative justice. This activism and potential exist for the multitude.
- Subjects
CRIMINOLOGICAL research; ACTIVISM; RESTORATIVE justice; RISK management information systems; CRITICAL pedagogy
- Publication
Critical Criminology, 2016, Vol 24, Issue 4, p549
- ISSN
1205-8629
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10612-016-9328-5