Boronski's contribution to the evolving literature on critical pedagogy is both contemporary and challenging. Pedagogy for change becomes even more applicable during uncertain and unprecedented times. This is a key text for undergraduate and postgraduate students in education and the wider social and political sciences. - Dr. Richard Race, School of Education, Roehampton University, UK
Students of critical pedagogy - this book is a biblical gift! Boronski has carefully crafted a text that is accessible and sophisticated. The book does not shy away from telling it like it is. It takes you through a no-nonsense journey that is rich in diversity and originality, provoking you to see the world from the perspective of the powerless with a critical pedagogic lens. Impassioned, relevant, and essential for emerging critical scholars and activists - I couldn't recommend it more. - Dr Alpesh Maisuria, Associate Professor of Education Policy in Critical Education UWE, UK
At a time when the world faces a global pandemic issues of inequality, oppression and injustice are urgent concerns of critical social theory and pedagogy. This comprehensive book not only defines the field of critical pedagogy, within its historical context. but also provides a contemporary account of emerging areas of social justice and decolonisation. It will inspire discussion and debate between students, and their lecturers, concerning the pressing issues of our time regarding the position of pedagogy in global struggles. - Professor John Preston, Department of Sociology, University of Essex, UK
In a world dominated by conflicts and pandemics, this book offers crucial ways of understanding how theories and practices justifying inequalities and oppression come to dominate. Through critical pedagogies the book offers new ways of thinking about how education at all levels could be reconstructed towards challenging current ideologies and policies and create the conditions for greater equality, social and economic justice. Alternative ways of educating and living are possible and societies can choose to live in more egalitarian ways. - Professor Sally Tomlinson
This is a timely and much needed intervention. Boronski has produced a fine book, that exemplifies many of the qualities of critical pedagogy that it examines; it is generous, wide-ranging and inclusive, using vivid examples from different parts of the globe, mobilising contemporary scholarship in the social sciences to offer a trenchant and persuasive vulnerable in societies. Yet, Boronski is sensitive and open to the possibilities and evocations of radical change and transformation inherent in the sociopolitical project of critical pedagogy, and the significance of human agency in forging more just and equitable societies. This is a highly readable account of what critical pedagogy, broadly construed, means today and what it has to offer us as a form of living and enacted theory of society. - Dr Ayo Mansaray, FRSA, Lecturer in Sociology of Education and Policy, Kings College London, UK