Climate lessons from the Cold Edge:rethinking the University as an ethical ecology

• Purpose This largely conceptual study draws from the author’s experience of conversations with Svalbard’s educators, lessons for international Higher Education Institutions’ engagement with climate change education and thinking for non-specialists. • Design/methodology/approach In-situ discussions...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Boxley, Simon
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:http://winchester.elsevierpure.com/en/publications/5a30d699-2f82-487f-a016-fe5ea59f209b
https://cris.winchester.ac.uk/ws/files/19894265/19828313_Boxley_ClimateLessonsColdEdge_withstatement.pdf
Description
Summary:• Purpose This largely conceptual study draws from the author’s experience of conversations with Svalbard’s educators, lessons for international Higher Education Institutions’ engagement with climate change education and thinking for non-specialists. • Design/methodology/approach In-situ discussions with Svalbard’s educators informed the theoretical work of the author towards the development of conceptual conclusions. The theoretical frame employed – ‘Red Biocentrism’ – draws on both radical left and green thought to posit an emplaced, materialist understanding of author’s, participants and place’s intra-related contributions. • Findings That, insofar as universities represent nodes in an ethical ecology, they have a capacity to realise that which is obvious in Svalbard – their role as embassies for their learning-places, generative of spokespeople or ambassadors. • Originality There is sparse published research into the work of Svalbard’s climate educators, as a pedagogical project undertaken under such extreme and rapidly changing environmental conditions. This article represents the first to reflect on what can be learnt from the educators of Svalbard by Universities elsewhere.