A Adobe Pedagogy: Bolivian Indigenous Youth Agency and Leadership in the Warisata School-Ayllu 1931-1940

Youth Agency and Leadership in the Warisata School-Ayllu 1931-1940

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5935/6644.20260023

Abstract

The article analyzes the Warisata School-Ayllu (1931-1940) in Bolivia, focusing on the agency of indigenous children and youth. It investigates how "adobe pedagogy" and the Amauta Parliament broke with the colonial model of education, promoting youth leadership in the resistance against servitude. The research uses historiographical sources to discuss childhood as a political subject and the school as a center for community sovereignty and ethnic resistance in the Andean context.

 

 

Author Biography

  • Felipe Uzeda (USP), University of São Paulo

    Felipe Uzeda is a PhD candidate in Latin American Integration at the Post-Graduate Program in Latin American Integration of the University of São Paulo (PROLAM-USP), under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Marciel Consani. He holds a Master’s degree from the same program and a Bachelor’s degree in History. As a researcher focused on the History of Education in Latin America, he is dedicated to the study of indigenous pedagogical models, with an emphasis on the Warisata School-Ayllu (Bolivia) and the processes of ethnic agency and resistance in the Andean context.

Published

2026-06-26

How to Cite

A Adobe Pedagogy: Bolivian Indigenous Youth Agency and Leadership in the Warisata School-Ayllu 1931-1940: Youth Agency and Leadership in the Warisata School-Ayllu 1931-1940. (2026). TEL Tempo, Espaço E Linguagem, 17(1), 138-176. https://doi.org/10.5935/6644.20260023