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Critical realism, environmental learning and socio-ecological change / edited by Leigh Price and Heila Lotz-Sisitka.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Ontological explorationsLondon : Routledge, 2020Description: xix, 364 pages ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780367597689
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 149.2 PRI TESF022 23
Contents:
1. Why critical realism, environmental learning and social-ecological change? Introducing the chapters 2. Key critical realist concepts for environmental educators 3. Using critical realism to explain change in the context of participatory mapping and resilience 4. Networking: Enabling or constraining institutionalization of environmental education courses in universities 5. Underlabouring systems thinking with critical realism in understanding Rhodes University’s response to the sustainability imperative 6. Bhaskar and collective action: Using lamination as a framework for reviewing the literature on collective action 7. Absenting the absence of parallel learning pathways for intermediate skills: The ‘missing middle’ in the environmental sector in South Africa 8. The emergence of environmental ethics discourses in stratified, open systems: some educational considerations 9. Working with critical realist perspective and tools at the interface of indigenous and scientific knowledge in a science curriculum setting 10. Indigenous knowledge and critical realism on the Eastern Coast of Tanzania 11. Dialectical critical realism and Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT): Exploring and expanding learning processes in sustainable agriculture workplace contexts 12. Community learning as a passage through the dialectic? Engaging with absences in an irrigation scheme in Mozambique 13. Exploring contradictions and absences in mobilizing ‘learning as process’ for sustainable agricultural practices 14. Exploring critical realist insights into transformative environmental learning processes in contexts of social-ecological risk 15. Emergent properties and position-practice system of university educators in the mainstreaming of Education for Sustainable Development 16. Steel Valley and the absence of environmental justice in the new South Africa: Critical realism’s kinship with environmental justice 17. Absenting absence: Expanding zones of proximal development in environmental learning processes 18. Some implications of metaReality for environmental educators
List(s) this item appears in: TESF Library Exhibition
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Book Book Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore 149.2 PRI TESF022 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available TESF022

1. Why critical realism, environmental learning and social-ecological change? Introducing the chapters 2. Key critical realist concepts for environmental educators 3. Using critical realism to explain change in the context of participatory mapping and resilience 4. Networking: Enabling or constraining institutionalization of environmental education courses in universities 5. Underlabouring systems thinking with critical realism in understanding Rhodes University’s response to the sustainability imperative 6. Bhaskar and collective action: Using lamination as a framework for reviewing the literature on collective action 7. Absenting the absence of parallel learning pathways for intermediate skills: The ‘missing middle’ in the environmental sector in South Africa 8. The emergence of environmental ethics discourses in stratified, open systems: some educational considerations 9. Working with critical realist perspective and tools at the interface of indigenous and scientific knowledge in a science curriculum setting 10. Indigenous knowledge and critical realism on the Eastern Coast of Tanzania 11. Dialectical critical realism and Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT): Exploring and expanding learning processes in sustainable agriculture workplace contexts 12. Community learning as a passage through the dialectic? Engaging with absences in an irrigation scheme in Mozambique 13. Exploring contradictions and absences in mobilizing ‘learning as process’ for sustainable agricultural practices 14. Exploring critical realist insights into transformative environmental learning processes in contexts of social-ecological risk 15. Emergent properties and position-practice system of university educators in the mainstreaming of Education for Sustainable Development 16. Steel Valley and the absence of environmental justice in the new South Africa: Critical realism’s kinship with environmental justice 17. Absenting absence: Expanding zones of proximal development in environmental learning processes 18. Some implications of metaReality for environmental educators

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