
David Eloy Zúñiga Delgado is a leader in organizational and educational community processes within Black communities. He is a Master’s student in Anthropology at the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO-Ecuador) and holds a degree in Popular Education from the Universidad del Valle (Colombia). With nine years of experience, he has worked on developing organizational processes with Black communities, designing and implementing pedagogical strategies to strengthen social bonds through playful, festive, and recreational methodologies.
A former Martin Luther King Program scholar and best university graduate, he has managed social and community projects focusing on participatory methodologies and Afro-descendant perspectives. He is a member of the Asociación de Mujeres Afrocolombianas – AMAFROCOL and has experience in social and community research, applying intersectional and participatory action approaches. He has designed and facilitated training workshops in Afro-descendant communities, fostering educational spaces integrating ancestral knowledge and cultural expressions. His work combines education, writing, recreation, and activism, using rap as a pedagogical tool for memory-building and identity reclamation, while also developing intercultural integration strategies.
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