Lexington Books
Pages: 416
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0288-6 • Hardback • May 2003 • $181.00 • (£140.00)
Robert Austin is Research Associate at the Centro de Estudios y Capacitación Técnico Pedagógica in Santiago, Chile. He holds a Ph.D. in History from La Trobe University.
Chapter 1 The Political Economy of Chile: From Independence to Estado Docente, 1810-1920
Chapter 2 Popular Education from Estado Docente to Estado de Compromiso, 1920-1964
Chapter 3 Literacy and the Model "Alliance" State, 1964-1970
Chapter 4 Popular Education and Popular Struggle, 1964-1970
Chapter 5 Popular Unity, Popular Education, and Literacy, 1970-1973
Chapter 6 Mobilization, Literacy Texts, and Freirian Praxis, 1970-1973
Chapter 7 Neoliberal versus Popular Literacy, 1973-1980
Chapter 8 Adult Literacy, Education Reform, and "Tucanes," 1980-1989
Chapter 9 Foreign Interests: Re-articulating National and Transnational Literacy, 1974-1989
Chapter 10 Conclusions: Towards a Political Economy of Popular Education
Robert [Austin] has structured what is, probably, the most complete work written on Chile in the field.
— Gabriel Salazar, Universidad de Chile
Robert Austin has produced a fascinating analysis of the development of education policies in a Third World nation, and how the problem of illiteracy was overcome and why. This remarkable investigative achievement will be of special interest to cultural historians, political scientists, and those interested in education policies in Latin America.
— Graham E.L. Holton, Institute of Latin American Studies, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia; Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies
This substantial volume constitutes an enourmous challenge both to Latin Americanists and to those who seek points of comparision in the analysis of historical processes.
— Hispanic American Historical Review
The State, Literacy, and Popular Education in Chile, 1964-1990 is different and challenging, and as such will invigorate the study of the history of adult and popular education in Latin America.
— Asunción Lavrin, Arizona State University; From The Foreword