“你是环保指南吗?”1986-1992年英国女童军协会的保护、环境保护和公民意识

Siân Edwards
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文探讨了1986 - 1992年英国女童军协会(GGA)环境教育的意义和意义。它考虑了在公众和政治对世界环境日益关注的情况下,青年组织如何重新定义公民身份的意义。在这样做的过程中,它建立在我们对该组织的理解之上,通过探索在玛格丽特·撒切尔首相的英国背景下,在运动中对公民身份的不断变化的理解。文章认为,20世纪下半叶日益增长的环保意识见证了向地球公民理想的迈进,鼓励成员通过参与环境问题和人道主义成为环境变化的推动者。这标志着一个长期强调责任和服务的民族主义思想的组织的转变,因为组织期刊在建立跨越地理边界的绿色公民思想的流行话语中发挥了重要作用。然而,组织对世界保护的关注也加强了传统的公民模式,强调公民义务和个人责任,这在1980年代的社会和政治气候中得到了加强。事实上,组织内部的绿色公民的构建是在撒切尔夫人关于积极公民和消费者责任的话语中形成和加强的,这些话语支撑了撒切尔的“绿色转向”。此外,绿色公民是一个性别概念,反映了1980年代对传统性别角色的强调,鼓励女孩为年轻的绿色消费者和未来的绿色家庭主妇的角色做准备。因此,绿色公民,正如它在GGA中动员的那样,是一个模糊的实体,由各种当代社会政治话语支撑,并在各种空间寄存器中发挥作用,从全球到个人。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
‘Are you a green Guide’? Conservation, environmentalism, and citizenship in the British Girl Guides Association, 1986-1992
ABSTRACT This article explores the meaning and significance of environmental education within the British Girl Guides Association (GGA) in the period 1986–92. It considers how the youth organization reconceptualized meanings of citizenship in the wake of increased public and political concern surrounding the world environment. In doing so, it builds upon our understanding of the organization, by exploring changing understandings of citizenship within the movement in the context of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s Britain. It argues that a growing awareness of environmentalism in the latter half of the twentieth century saw a move towards an ideal of planetary citizenship, with members being encouraged to become agents of environmental change through their engagement with environmental issues and humanitarianism. This marked a shift in an organization that had long emphasized nationalistic ideas of duty and service, as organizational periodicals played a significant role in establishing in popular discourse an idea of green citizenship, which crossed geographical boundaries. Yet the organizational focus on world conservation also reinforced traditional models of citizenship, with an emphasis on civic duty and individual responsibility, which were reinforced in the social and political climate of the 1980s. Indeed, the construction of green citizenship within the organization was forged within, and reinforced, Thatcherite discourses of active citizenship and consumer duty, which had underpinned Thatcher’s ‘green turn’. Moreover, reflecting the emphasis on traditional gender roles in the 1980s, the green citizen was a gendered concept with girls encouraged to prepare for their roles as both young green consumers and future green homemakers. Therefore, green citizenship, as it was mobilized in the GGA, was a nebulous entity that was underpinned by a variety of contemporary socio-political discourses and played out on a variety of spatial registers, from the global to the individual.
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