Ignacio Martín-Baró
Hi Friends! Today I’m going to tell you about a person
who has done a very important job in psychology, his name is Ignacio Martín-Baró.
Ignacio Martín-Baró was a psychologist and a Spanish
Jesuit priest who devoted his life to researching the difficult social and
political reality of a small Latin American country, El Salvador, where he
taught at the Central American University "José Simeón Cañas" (UCA),
of which he was responsible for the Department of Psychology and Education and
Vice-rector, founded a prestigious institute of public opinion, the IUDOP.
Besides, He fought for Human Rights, equality and
social justice in El Salvador. He criticized the negative impact of US policy
for his country. He was very influential in a wide range of academics and
activists in the United States. He was a follower of the Theology of
Liberation, father of the Social Psychology of Liberation and main reference of
Latin American Social Psychology, especially in community psychology and
political psychology.
One of the most important things that
Ignacio has done was that in the middle of the war, he proposed that a solidary
academic network be created that transcends borders, to contribute to the
discussion of theories and methods for the formation and training of
professionals capable of responding to the needs of the victims.
I really like his way of practicing psychology because
it makes it wider, makes it less scientific and places psychology in a specific
context so that it responds to the particular needs of each people. I like the
idea that oppressed by various problems can be helped by people who can
empathize with them and relate their social conditions to the place where they
live, I don’t like the idea of practicing a general psychology without a
specific context.
"Performing a psychology of liberation requires first achieving a liberation from psychology" - Ignacio Martín Baró.

The texts we read from Baró were so enlightening...
ResponderEliminarthe deadline was Friday 27th!!
ResponderEliminarIt´s a very inspiring work and story. I would like to read much more about him
ResponderEliminar