Decolonizing Environmental Education for Different Contexts and Nations
As Dominant Western Worldviews (DWWs) proliferate through ongoing structures of globalization, neoliberalism, extractive capitalism, and colonialism, they inevitably marginalize those deemed as ‘Other’ (Indigenous, Black, Minority Ethnic, non-Western communities and non-human ‘Others’, including animals, plants, technologies, and energies). Environmental Education (EE) is well-positioned to trouble and minimize the harmful human impacts on social and ecological systems, yet the field is susceptible to how DWWs constrain and discipline what counts as viable knowledge, with a consequence of this being the loss of situated knowledges. To understand the relationships between DWW and situated knowledges and to thread an assemblage of ontological views that exist in unique contexts and nations, authors in this book take up decolonizing methodologies that expand across theories of Indigenous Knowledges (IK), Traditional Ecological Knowledges (TEK), two-eyed seeing, hybridity, and posthumanism. As EE opens to emplaced and situated socio-cultural and material stories, it opens to opportunities to attend more meaningfully to planetary social and ecological crisis narratives through contingent, contextualised, and relevant actions.

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Decolonizing Environmental Education for Different Contexts and Nations
As Dominant Western Worldviews (DWWs) proliferate through ongoing structures of globalization, neoliberalism, extractive capitalism, and colonialism, they inevitably marginalize those deemed as ‘Other’ (Indigenous, Black, Minority Ethnic, non-Western communities and non-human ‘Others’, including animals, plants, technologies, and energies). Environmental Education (EE) is well-positioned to trouble and minimize the harmful human impacts on social and ecological systems, yet the field is susceptible to how DWWs constrain and discipline what counts as viable knowledge, with a consequence of this being the loss of situated knowledges. To understand the relationships between DWW and situated knowledges and to thread an assemblage of ontological views that exist in unique contexts and nations, authors in this book take up decolonizing methodologies that expand across theories of Indigenous Knowledges (IK), Traditional Ecological Knowledges (TEK), two-eyed seeing, hybridity, and posthumanism. As EE opens to emplaced and situated socio-cultural and material stories, it opens to opportunities to attend more meaningfully to planetary social and ecological crisis narratives through contingent, contextualised, and relevant actions.

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Decolonizing Environmental Education for Different Contexts and Nations

Decolonizing Environmental Education for Different Contexts and Nations

Decolonizing Environmental Education for Different Contexts and Nations

Decolonizing Environmental Education for Different Contexts and Nations

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Overview

As Dominant Western Worldviews (DWWs) proliferate through ongoing structures of globalization, neoliberalism, extractive capitalism, and colonialism, they inevitably marginalize those deemed as ‘Other’ (Indigenous, Black, Minority Ethnic, non-Western communities and non-human ‘Others’, including animals, plants, technologies, and energies). Environmental Education (EE) is well-positioned to trouble and minimize the harmful human impacts on social and ecological systems, yet the field is susceptible to how DWWs constrain and discipline what counts as viable knowledge, with a consequence of this being the loss of situated knowledges. To understand the relationships between DWW and situated knowledges and to thread an assemblage of ontological views that exist in unique contexts and nations, authors in this book take up decolonizing methodologies that expand across theories of Indigenous Knowledges (IK), Traditional Ecological Knowledges (TEK), two-eyed seeing, hybridity, and posthumanism. As EE opens to emplaced and situated socio-cultural and material stories, it opens to opportunities to attend more meaningfully to planetary social and ecological crisis narratives through contingent, contextualised, and relevant actions.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781433191749
Publisher: Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
Publication date: 05/31/2022
Series: (Post-)Critical Global Childhood & Youth Studies , #3
Pages: 254
Product dimensions: 5.91(w) x 8.86(h) x (d)

About the Author

Kathryn Riley obtained a Ph.D. from Deakin University, Australia, in 2019. Kathryn is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Saskatchewan, Canada.

Janet McVittie obtained a Ph.D. from Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada in 1999. She is currently retired from a 23 year career teaching and researching in the departments of Curriculum Studies and Educational Foundations at the University of Saskatchewan, Canada.

Marcelo Gules Borges obtained a Ph.D. from Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil in 2014. He is currently a Tenured Assistant Professor at the Department of Teaching Methodology, School of Education, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil.

Table of Contents

List of Figures ix

Note from the Series Editors xi

Acknowledgments xiii

Abbreviations xv

Decolonizing Environmental Education for Different Contexts and Nations Janet McVittie 1

A Global Assemblage Zuzana Morog 27

1 Integrating Social and Ecological Justice Inquiry Vince Anderson 29

Water Deep Sky McKenzie 55

2 Mutually Entangled Futures in/for Environmental Education Kathryn Riley 57

Ahora Adentro Araceli Leon Torrijos 73

3 Decolonial Pedagogy, Agroecology, and Environmental Education: Repositioning Science Education in Rural Teacher Education in Brazil Marcelo Gules Borges 75

4 Taking Learning Outside Alice Johnston 97

Walking Gently … Through a Cultural Lens … Kylie Clarke 117

5 Decolonizing Education for Sustainable Development Roseann Kerr 119

6 Decolonizing Environmental Education in Ghana John B. Acharibasam 145

Earth Sorrow Elsa McKenzie 163

7 Naturalized Places, Indigenous Epistemology, and Learning to Value Janet McVittie Marcelo Gules Borges 165

8 Environmental Education through Indigenous Land-Based Learning Ranjan Datta 189

Escolas Marginalizadas e Educaçao Ambiental/Marginalized Schools and Environmental Education Julio Karpen 205

9 "From the Stars in the Sky to the Fish in the Sea" Kai Orca 207

Epilogue 235

About the Authors 239

Index 243

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