Back to Search Start Over

Vulnerable Reading Practices for Ecosocial Justice in Environmental Education

Authors :
Karen Nociti
Mindy Blaise
Source :
Environmental Education Research. 2024 30(9):1571-1586.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Environmental education has the potential to extend its transformative potential by reframing social and ecological justice as always interconnected. This paper introduces vulnerable reading as a method for unsettling anthropocentric and colonial influences on how educators conceptualise and respond to environmental precarity through a socio-ecological lens. It has emerged from a six-month walking project during which the authors developed vulnerable reading practices as they walked with young children, educators, and a weedy landscape in Boorloo (Perth), Western Australia. With a focus on reimagining pedagogies to be inclusive of multiple weedy ideas, bodies and voices, the paper uses empirical examples of practice to illustrate how vulnerable reading across temporalities, scales, disciplines, and genres draws attention to the complex relations humans share with weedy worlds. The paper shows how vulnerable reading is a feminist and anticolonial practice that makes visible the complexity of relations humans share with more-than-human worlds and is an example of ecosocial justice in action.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1350-4622 and 1469-5871
Volume :
30
Issue :
9
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Environmental Education Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ1435655
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Evaluative
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/13504622.2024.2349274