Sustainability in Environmental Education: Away from pluralism and towards solutions
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7213/rebrae.07.003.AO04Keywords:
The Blue Economy, Environmental education, Industrial ecology, Sustainable consumption.Abstract
Researchers in education for sustainable development have argued that sustainability is not fixed but socially constructed, and that sustainability issues should be represented as a continuous quest rather than indisputable targets that can be anticipated, planned and regulated according to predetermined guidelines. These scholars often doubt that there is one ‘right’ way to be sustainable. Considering the immensity of environmental sustainability challenges, such as climate change, species extinction, and pollution, this article takes a different perspective. The author will argue that without acceptance of unsustainability as a concrete challenge that requires concrete positivistic solutions, the challenge of addressing unsustainable practices becomes unsurmountable. The author will argue that there is a need for clear articulation of 1. What (un)sustainability is; and 2. What the key challenges and causes of (un)sustainability are; and 3. How the sustainability challenges can be meaningfully addressed. This article will outline a number of helpful frameworks that address obstacles to sustainability, ranging from population growth to unsustainable production and consumption practices. In particular, these solutions include investment in family planning policies to counter the effects of overpopulation, and alternative production frameworks, such as Cradle to Cradle, The Blue Economy and Circular Economy that differ from the conventional frameworks such as eco-efficiency, and have the potential to move the quest for sustainability beyond ‘business as usual’. This article will conclude with the broader reflection that without goaloriented critical learning explicitly providing alternative sound models of sustainability, democratic learning may never permit transcendence from unsustainable models. In order to overcome the practical impasse inherent in much of neoliberal education, educators can begin to close ranks and realize that each has valuable strengths that can help in the reconstruction of education for sustainability.Downloads
References
BENYUS, J. M. Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature. New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 1997.
BIESTA, G. Beyond learning. Democratic education for a human future. Boulder, CO: Paradigm,
BLOWFIELD, M. Business and Sustainability. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013.
BONNETT, M. Retrieving Nature. Education for a post-humanist age. Oxford: Blackwell, 2004.
BONNETT, M. Environmental concern, moral education, and our place in nature. Journal of
Moral Education Special Issue: Moral Education and Environmental Concern, 41(3): 285–
, 2012.
BRAUNGART, M. Waste to energy: http://catalystreview.net/2010/02/cradle-to-cradletransitioning-from-waste-incineration-to-beneficial-materials, 2013.
CHERNIAK, B. Critiquing the Role of Deliberative Democracy in EE and ESD: The Case for
Effective Participation and Pragmatic Deliberation. Uppsala University, Department of Earth
Sciences Master Thesis, Geotryckeriet, 2012.
COMMONER, B. The closing circle: confronting the environmental crisis, New York, Knopf,
CRIST, E. Abundant Earth and Population. In P. Cafaro and E. Crist (Eds). Life on the Brink: Environmentalists confront Overpopulation. University of Georgia Press. (p. 141-153), 2012.
DALY, H. E. Steady-State Economics, 2nd edition. Island Press, Washington, DC. p.17, 1991.
DALY, H. E. Sustainable Growth: An Impossibility Theorem. Clearinghouse Bulletin, April 1994,
Carrying Capacity Network, Washington, D.C.z, 1994.
THE ECONOMIST. Climate Change: Theatre of the Absurd. December 1, P. 62, 2012.
FROSCH, R. A.; GALLOPOULOS, N. E. Strategies for manufacturing. Scientific American, 261:
-152, 1989.
GRAEDEL, T. E. On the Concept of Industrial Ecology. Annual Review of Energy and the Environment, 21, 69-98, 1996.
JICKLING, B. Education and advocacy: A Troubling Relationship. In JOHNSON, E. A.; MAPPIN, M.
(Eds.) Education and advocacy: Changing Perspectives of Ecology and Education, (pp.91-113).
Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2005.
JICKLING, B.; WALS, A. E. J. Probing Normative Research in Environmental Education: Ideas
About Education and Ethics. International Handbook of Research on Environmental Education,
edited by Robert B. Stevenson, Michael Brody, Justin Dillon, Arjen E.J. Wals. Pp. 74-87, 2013.
HAWKEN, P. The Ecology of Commerce: A declaration of sustainability. Harper Collins Publishers, New York, 1993.
International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Why is biodiversity in crisis?
http://www.iucn.org/iyb/about/biodiversity_crisis/IPCC. 2014. Fifth assessment Report http://www.ipcc.ch/
KOPNINA, H.; BLEWITT, J. Sustainable Business: Key issues. Routledge Earthscan, New York,
LYLE, J. T. Regenerative Design for Sustainable Development, New York, Wiley, 1996.
MCDONOUGH, W.; BRAUNGART, M. Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things. New
York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2002.
MCINTIRE-STRASBURG, J. Robbing the Cradle to Cradle? William McDonough a Saint… and a
Sinner. Blog post. http://sustainablog.org/2008/11/robbing-the-cradle-to-cradle-williammcdonough-a-saint-and-a-sinner/, 2008.
MEADOWS, D. H.; MEADOWS, D. L.; RANDERS, J.; BEHRENS, W. W. Limits to Growth: A Report
for the Club of Rome's Project on the Predicament of Mankind. Universe Books, New York City,
MEA Millennium Ecosystem Assessment http://www.maweb.org/en/index.aspx
MORLEY, L.; MARGINSON, S.; BLACKMORE, J. Education and neoliberal globalization, British
Journal of Sociology of Education, 35(3): 457-468, 2014.
PAULI, G. The Blue Economy - 10 Years, 100 Innovations and 100 Million Jobs a Report to the
Club of Rome, Taos, New Mexico, Paradigm Publications, 2010.
PAULI, G. From Deep Ecology to The Blue Economy: A review of the main concepts related to
environmental, social and ethical business that contributed to the creation of The Blue Economy. ZERI, 2011.
PINSKE, J.; KOLK, A. International Business and Global Climate Change. New York:
Routledge, 2009.
REES, W. The ecological crisis and self-delusion: implications for the building sector. Building
Research and Information 37(3):300–311, 2009.
SCOTT, J. T. New Standards for Long-Term Business Survival. In: Stahel, W. R. (ed.). Sustainable
Business Performance. London: Palgrave, 2011.
STAHEL, W. R.; REDAY-MULVEY, G. Jobs for tomorrow: the potential for substituting manpower for energy. Vantage Press, 1981.
STAHEL, W. R. The Product-Life Factor In: (ED.), S. G. O. (ed.) An Inquiry into the Nature of
Sustainable Societies, the Role of the Private Sector. HARC Houston, Texas, USA, 1984.
TENNANT, M.; BRENNAN, G. Business and production solutions: Closing the Loop. In Sustainability: Key issues. H. Kopnina and E. Shoreman-Ouimet, eds. New York: Routledge, 2015.
UNEP. http://www.unep.org/
WALS, A. E. J. Review of Contexts and Structures for Education for Sustainable Development. UNESCO, Paris, 2009.
WALS, A. E. J. Between knowing what is right and knowing that it is wrong to tell others what
is right: On relativism, uncertainty and democracy in environmental and sustainability education. Environmental Education Research 16 (1): 143–51, 2010.
WASHINGTON, H. G. Human Dependence on Nature, New York. Routledge: Earthscan, 2013.
WEBSTER, K. Hidden Sources: Understanding Natural Systems is the Key to an Evolving and
Aspirational ESD. Journal of Education for Sustainable Development, 1 (1): 37 – 43, 2007.
VAN HUIJSTEE, M.; GLASBERGEN, P. NGOs Moving Business: An Analysis of Contrasting Strategies. Business Society 49(4): 591-618, 2010.
VAN POECK, K.; VANDENABEELE, J. Learning from sustainable development: education in the
light of public issues. Environmental Education Research, 18(4): 541-552, 2012.