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Ana Sigüenza

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Spanish teacher and trade unionist (born 1957)

This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Sigüenza, the second or maternal family name is Carbonell.
Ana Sigüenza
Sigüenza in 2014
General Secretary of the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo
In office
October 2000 – March 2003
Preceded byLuis Fuentes
Succeeded byIñaki Gil [es]
Personal details
BornAna María Sigüenza Carbonell
c. 1957 (age 66–67)
ProfessionTeacher

Ana María Sigüenza Carbonell (born c. 1957) is a Spanish teacher and anarcho-syndicalist trade union leader. She served as the General Secretary of the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT) from 2000 to 2003, making her the first woman to be general secretary of a national trade union centre in Spain.

Biography

Sigüenza joined the CNT in 1977 and initially worked in the chemical industry before switching to being a teacher. She worked as a secondary school teacher in Madrid, before retiring around 2018. During the Spanish transition to democracy, as the Spanish labour movement debated participation in union elections [es] for works councils, she sided with the opposition. Sigüenza believed that participation in works councils would be "the end of Spanish trade unionism", a position she continued to hold over 40 years later.

From October 2000 to March 2003, Sigüenza served as the General Secretary of the CNT. She has been credited as the first woman to hold the position of general secretary of a national trade union centre in Spain. As general secretary, she oversaw the organisation of self-employed workers and workers in small and medium-sized enterprises; she criticised major trade unions such as the UGT and CCOO for focusing on an outdated model of industrial organisation, which focused on older men at the expense of younger people and women. She also oversaw an increase in participation in social movements, supporting anti-eviction campaigns and leading the 2018 Spanish women's strike. She has also worked with the International Confederation of Labour (ICL), which split from the International Workers' Association (IWA) in 2016. In the case of "the Suiza Six", six Asturian CNT members who had been sentenced to seven years' imprisonment on charges of coercion and obstruction of justice, Sigüenza supported their defense campaign and appeal to the Supreme Court, believing there was "no legal basis" for their prosecution.

In the 2010s, Sigüenza began researching progressive education and developing a libertarian theory of pedagogy. Her pedagogical ideas were explicitly utopian, as she wrote that "from a pedagogical point of view, utopia is necessary because no project should be considered finished, nor should it be considered absolutely perfect; it is a never-ending process that people and future generations will continue to build or create in order to better respond to their needs and life circumstances." In 2018, Sigüenza published a book on libertarian pedagogy, in which she outlined that anarchist educational methods should neither claim neutrality nor practice indoctrination. She proposed that, while the roles of teacher and student constituted a form of "admissible authority", the two roles ought to be temporary and open to alternation.

Selected works

As author
As contributor

See also

References

  1. ^ Poncieu 2024.
  2. ^ Pascual 2018.
  3. Muñoz Encinar, Palomo Guijarro & Recio Cuesta 2010, p. 119.
  4. Muñoz Encinar, Palomo Guijarro & Recio Cuesta 2010, p. 119; Pascual 2018; Vadillo Muñoz 2019, p. 277.
  5. Campo 2024.
  6. Mogollón Castro & Rivera Ayala 2021, p. 51.
  7. Ruiz Pina 2021, pp. 49–50.
  8. Ruiz Pina 2021, p. 49.

Bibliography

External links

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