Knowledge Production and Emancipatory Social Movements from the Heart of Globalised Hipsterdom, Williamsburg, Brooklyn

The nature of capitalism in its neoliberal form is decreasing higher education's exclusive domain of knowledge production by exposing students to and exploiting local knowledge production. This has created a paradox. Experiential learning is being supported as 'academic' because stude...

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Veröffentlicht in:Anthropology in action (London, England : 1994) England : 1994), 2016-03, Vol.23 (1), p.22-30
1. Verfasser: Beck, Sam
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The nature of capitalism in its neoliberal form is decreasing higher education's exclusive domain of knowledge production by exposing students to and exploiting local knowledge production. This has created a paradox. Experiential learning is being supported as 'academic' because students learn skills, values and perspectives by engaging in communities of practice. Through community service learning and social justice oriented internships, students learn about emancipatory social movements while simultaneously providing their intellectual capital. Urban Semester Program students participate in the movement for affordable housing, with its origins in post-war Williamsburg, Brooklyn, where many Puerto Ricans settled. Engaged in a struggle against displacement, for self-determination and developing community sustainability by advocating and winning low and moderate income housing, residents are determined to remain in their neighbourhood. Students are engaged in this struggle and connect this exposure to their internships, and the globalising world economy, the role of the state, and corporate power.
ISSN:0967-201X
0967-201X
1752-2285
DOI:10.3167/aia.2016.230104