Since the publication of the English-language edition in 1970,
Pedagogy of the Oppressed has had a large impact in
education and
pedagogy worldwide, especially as a defining work of
critical pedagogy. According to Israeli writer and
education reform theorist
Sol Stern, it has "achieved near-iconic status in America's teacher-training programs". Connections have also been made between Freire's non-dualism theory in pedagogy and Eastern philosophical traditions such as the
Advaita Vedanta. In 1977, the Adult Learning Project, based on Freire's work, was established in the
Gorgie-Dalry neighborhood of
Edinburgh, Scotland. This project had the participation of approximately 200 people in the first years, and had among its aims to provide affordable and relevant local learning opportunities and to build a network of local tutors. In Scotland, Freire's ideas of popular education influenced
activist movements not only in Edinburgh but also in
Glasgow. Freire's major exponents in North America are
bell hooks,
Henry Giroux,
Peter McLaren,
Donaldo Macedo,
Antonia Darder,
Joe L. Kincheloe,
Shirley R. Steinberg,
Carlos Alberto Torres, and
Ira Shor. One of McLaren's edited texts,
Paulo Freire: A Critical Encounter, expounds upon Freire's impact in the field of
critical pedagogy. McLaren has also provided a comparative study concerning Paulo Freire and
Argentinian revolutionary icon
Che Guevara. Freire's work influenced the
radical math movement in the United States, which emphasizes social justice issues and critical pedagogy as components of mathematical curricula. In South Africa, Freire's ideas and methods were central to the 1970s
Black Consciousness Movement, often associated with
Steve Biko, as well as the trade union movement in the 1970s and 1980s, and the
United Democratic Front in the 1980s. The radical doctor
Abu Baker Asvat was among the many prominent anti-apartheid activists who used Freire's methods. Today there is a Paulo Freire Project at the
University of KwaZulu-Natal in
Pietermaritzburg and
Abahlali baseMjondolo, a radical movement of the urban poor, continues to use Freirian methods. In 1991, the
Paulo Freire Institute was established in
São Paulo to extend and elaborate upon his theories of
popular education. The institute has started projects in many countries and is headquartered at the
UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, where it actively maintains the Freire archives. Its director is UCLA
professor Carlos Torres, the author of several Freirean works, including the 1978
A praxis educativa de Paulo Freire. In 1999 PAULO, a national training organisation named in honour of Freire, was established in the United Kingdom. This agency was approved by the New Labour Government to represent some 300,000 community-based education practitioners working across the UK. PAULO was given formal responsibility for setting the occupational training standards for people working in this field. The
Paulo and Nita Freire Project for International Critical Pedagogy was founded at
McGill University. Here
Joe L. Kincheloe and
Shirley R. Steinberg worked to create a dialogical forum for critical scholars around the world to promote research and re-create a Freirean pedagogy in a multinational domain. After the death of Kincheloe, the project was transformed into a virtual global resource. Shortly before his death, Freire was working on a book of
ecopedagogy, a platform of work carried on by many of the Freire Institutes and Freirean Associations around the world today. It has been influential in helping to develop planetary education projects such as the
Earth Charter as well as countless international grassroots campaigns in the spirit of Freirean popular education generally. Freirean literacy methods have been adopted throughout the
developing world. In the Philippines, Catholic "
base Christian communities" adopted Freire's methods in
community education. Papua New Guinea, Freirean literacy methods were used as part of the World Bank-funded Southern Highlands Rural Development Program's Literacy Campaign. Freirean approaches also lie at the heart of the "Dragon Dreaming" approach to community programs that have spread to 20 countries by 2014.
Awards and honors •
King Baudouin International Development Prize 1980: Paulo Freire was the first person to receive this prize. He was nominated by Mathew Zachariah, Professor of Education at the University of Calgary. • Prize for Outstanding Christian Educators, with his wife Elza •
UNESCO Prize for Peace Education 1986 • Honorary Doctorate, the
University of Nebraska at Omaha, 1996, along with Augusto Boal, during their residency at the Second Pedagogy and Theatre of the Oppressed Conference in Omaha. • Honorary Degree from
Claremont Graduate University, 1992 • Honorary Doctorate from
The Open University, 1973 • Inducted,
International Adult and Continuing Education Hall of Fame, 2008 • Honorary Degree from the
University of Illinois at Chicago, 1993. ==Bibliography==