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Sophia, Colección de Filosofía de la Educación

 ISSN 1390-8626 ISSN 1390-3861

VARAS GONZALEZ, René Antonio; BETANCOURT SAEZ, Marcela Eliana    RODRIGUEZ MANCILLA, Héctor Marcelo. The secondary student movement in Chile an approach from complexity. []. , 29, pp.209-233. ISSN 1390-8626.  https://doi.org/10.17163/soph.n29.2020.07.

This article aims to analyze the secondary student movement in Chile from a transdisciplinary approach, as a complex phenomenon insufficiently investigated and reflected on by the social sciences and humanities. The general problem in which this objective is inscribed is that of the crisis in the institutions of liberal democracy, and more specifically, that of the relations between the concepts of citizenship and complexity, for the interpretation of the secondary student movement. Starting from the distinction between that citizen participation that takes shape under institutionalized forms of delegation of power in a political elite; and a participative, critical and transforming citizenship, which promotes and is carried out in forms of egalitarian association and political organization, in the exercise of sovereignty as praxis committed to the construction of the public and the common good. The information has been analyzed using hermeneutic-comprehensive methods typical of the social sciences and humanities, the foundations of which dialogue with the tradition of complex thought, converging in the critique of positivist reductionism of knowledge. It concludes by establishing the existence of a trend or transition within the secondary student movement, which goes from forms of association and organization typical of the liberal model, which delegates the sovereignty of citizenship to elected representatives, towards the preeminence of another current, Counter-hegemonic in character: a democratic model of direct and equal participation in community self-government.

: Complex thinking; secondary student movement; republican democratic tradition; education; citizenship; neoliberalism.

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