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Teaching Environmental Justice : Practices to Engage Students and Build Community / edited by Sikina Jinnah [and three others].
Format
Book
Language
English
Εdition
First edition.
Published/Created
Northampton : Edward Elgar Publishing, 2023.
Description
1 online resource (300 pages).
Availability
Available Online
DOAB Directory of Open Access Books
Details
Subject(s)
Environmental justice
—
Study and teaching
[Browse]
Environmental education
[Browse]
Publisher
Edward Elgar Publishing
[Browse]
Editor
Jinnah, Sikina, 1977-
[Browse]
Series
Elgar guides to teaching.
[More in this series]
Elgar Guides to Teaching Series
Restrictions note
Open Access.
Summary note
"This ground-breaking book presents interdisciplinary instructors with classroom tools and strategies to integrate environmental justice into their courses. Providing accessible, flexible, and evidence-based pedagogical approaches designed by a multidisciplinary team of scholars, it centers equity and justice in student learning and course design. It further presents a model for community-based faculty development that can communicate those pedagogical approaches across disciplines. Key Features: - Reflection on how to teach inclusively across disciplines, with a focus on community-based faculty development. - Presentation of a blend of insights from diverse disciplines, including art, astronomy, ecology, economics, history, political science, and online education. - A focus on how to stimulate student engagement to improve students' empirical and conceptual understanding of environmental politics. - Detailed instructions for both introductory and more advanced active learning assignments and classroom activities, including guidance on how to manage common challenges and adapt activities to specific learning environments, particularly online formats. Providing detailed instructions and reflections on teaching effectively and inclusively, Teaching Environmental Justice will be an invaluable resource for faculty and graduate students teaching modules in environmental justice in courses across disciplines. It will also be essential reading for researchers of teaching and learning seeking insight into cutting-edge classroom practices that center equity and justice in student learning"-- Provided by publisher.
Notes
Includes index.
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Source of description
Description based on print version record.
Rights and reproductions note
Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Contents
Contents: Foreword: Education for transformation at the nexus of justice and the environment / Julian Agyeman
Introduction to teaching environmental justice: Co-creating a faculty development model / Sikina Jinnah, Jessie Dubreuil, Jody Greene and Samara S. Foster
Part I. Projects for teaching environmental politics and justice
1. Protest music: Using music to challenge (environmental) hegemony / Kemi Fuentes-George
2. Epochs of domination and liberation: Expanding students' understanding of human-environment relationships in the service of environmental justice / David Pellow
3. Rethinking sustainable development practice: From intervention to reparation / Manisha Anantharaman and Jennifer Lee Tucker
4. Climate justice: Fostering student public engagement / Prakash Kashwan
5. Teaching perspective in an unequal world: Negotiating climate change within the UN system / Kate O'Neill and SebastiaÌn Rubiano-Galvis
6. Should solar geoengineering be used to address climate change? An ethics bowl-inspired approach / Sikina Jinnah and Juan Moreno-Cruz
7. Power in natural resource governance projects: Power hierarchies in the negotiation of an international petroleum contract / Alero Akporiaye and D. G. Webster
8. Relationships, respect, and reciprocity: Approaches to learning and teaching about indigenous cultural burning and landscape stewardship / Beth Rose Middleton Manning
9. Harnessing humor for tough talks: Humanitarian experiences addressing exclusion and climate risks / Pablo Suarez
10. Using contemplative practice to sustain equitable environmental engagement / Elizabeth Allison
11. The global environmental justice observatory: Fostering students' knowledge production, professionalization and belonging / Ravi Rajan and Flora Lu
Part II. Reflections from the outside of the silo
12. Colonization of fire: Why biophysical sciences must teach environmental justice / Crystal Kolden
13. How relational learning can disrupt the scientific cultural status quo: Lessons from astronomy / Kathryne J. Daniel and Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz
14. Using socially engaged art to teach environmental and social justice / Chessa Adsit-Morris
15. Teaching feminist economics to challenge the hidden assumptions in economics / Juan Moreno-Cruz
16. Community-engaged research in the natural sciences: Centering listening in the classroom / Kristy Kroeker
17. Teaching students how to get comfortable with the uncomfortable feeling of not knowing / Robin Dunkin
18. How online teaching and learning can support the public mission of research universities / Michael Tassio
19. Embodying social and environmental justice learning through somatic and mindfulness practices / Sapana Doshi and Tracey Osborne
Index.
Show 21 more Contents items
ISBN
1-78990-506-0
Statement on language in description
Princeton University Library aims to describe library materials in a manner that is respectful to the individuals and communities who create, use, and are represented in the collections we manage.
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