Abstract
This article tracks the engagement of university faculty in academic and community activism during thirty years in conflict-affected Northern Ireland. Over time, the team of three academics who wrote the article developed programs to help tackle educational disadvantage in a deeply divided society riven with violent conflict. Our pedagogical approach was driven by social justice principles in practice. In the process, students became what Ledwith & Springett (2010) describe as participative activists in the academy and in their own communities. The aim of this collective activism was to foster transformative change in a society that is now in transition from conflict. Key examples of critical practice are described. We use a case study approach to describe challenges faced by faculty and participants. We argue that academic activism and community partnership can play a positive role in community transformation in the most difficult circumstances.
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CITATION STYLE
Hawthorne-Steele, I., Moreland, R., & Rooney, E. (2015). Transforming communities through academic activism: An emancipatory, praxis-led approach. Studies in Social Justice, 9(2), 197–214. https://doi.org/10.26522/ssj.v9i2.1152
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