社论:理解不同社会、文化和物质环境下的集体学习和人类能动性

Lausanne Olvitt, H. Lotz-Sisitka, Jeppe Læssøe, N. Jørgensen
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引用次数: 3

摘要

国际社会科学理事会(n.d.)传达了环境和可持续教育研究和实践的重要性,以及它对人类可持续未来的潜在贡献,它解释说:世界各地的人们都需要学习如何创造新的人类活动形式和新的社会制度,这些活动和制度更可持续,社会公正。然而,我们对产生这种变化的学习类型,这种学习如何出现,或者如何在许多层面上进行扩展以创建转换的知识有限。在这方面,重要的转变是考虑什么样的社会制度、知识形式、学习过程和正义问题与维持或阻止地球生物-地球化学系统的衰退有关。本期《南部非洲环境教育杂志》为这些关于教育在实现可持续转型中的作用的国际讨论提供了三篇研究论文和一篇主题思考文集。总的来说,这些文章强调了在过去-现在-未来配置的社会文化和物质环境中,人际关系和人类能动性的形成如何支撑所有面向环境的学习过程。构成本卷第一部分的三篇研究论文提供了如何转变当前不可持续的社会文化和物质配置以解决社会不平等和受损的人与自然关系的一瞥。由Lotz-Sisitka、Laessoe和Jorgensen在本社论后面介绍的Think Piece系列侧重于学习如何促进和促进气候适应性发展的变革推动者和集体机构的发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editorial: Understanding Collective Learning and Human Agency in Diverse Social, Cultural and Material Settings
The significance of environment and sustainability education research and practice, and its potential contribution to a sustainable future for humanity, is conveyed by the International Social Science Council (n.d.), which explains: People everywhere will need to learn how to create new forms of human activity and new social systems that are more sustainable and socially just. However, we have limited knowledge about the type of learning that creates such change, how such learning emerges, or how it can be scaled-up to create transformations at many levels. Here, the important shift is towards considering what social systems, forms of knowledge, learning processes and questions of justice are associated with perpetuating or halting the decline of Earth’s bio-geo-chemical systems. This edition of the Southern African Journal of Environmental Education contributes three research papers and a themed Think Piece collection to these international deliberations about the role of education in enabling transformations to sustainability. Collectively, the articles highlight how relationality and the formation of human agency in socio-cultural and material settings in past–present–future configurations underpin all environment-oriented learning processes. The three research papers constituting the first part of this volume offer glimpses into how current unsustainable socio-cultural and material configurations might be transformed to address social inequalities and damaged people–nature relations. The Think Piece collection, introduced by Lotz-Sisitka, Laessoe and Jorgensen later in this editorial, focuses on how learning can foster and contribute to the development of change agents and collective agency for climate-resilient development.
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