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      Education and environmental sustainability: culture matters

      , ,
      Journal of International Cooperation in Education
      Emerald

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          Humans remain unsuccessful in their attempts to achieve environmental sustainability, despite decades of scientific awareness and political efforts toward that end. This paper suggests a fresh conceptualization, one that focuses on education, offers a fuller explanation for our lack of success and calls attention to alternatives.

          Design/methodology/approach

          The authors first critically review mainstream approaches that have been used to achieve environmental sustainability, then introduce an alternative that the authors call the cultural approach. The authors finally discuss how educational research should be re-articulated based on the cultural approach.

          Findings

          The authors identified three mainstream approaches – the technological, cognitive approach and behaviorist – all of which function to reproduce modern mainstream culture. In contrast, the cultural approach assumes modern mainstream culture as the root cause of environmental unsustainability and aims to rearticulate it. To elaborate a cultural approach, the authors recommend education scholars to (1) bring attention to the role of culture in sustainability and (2) identify education practices that are potentially useful for enacting a cultural shift, primarily developing richer synergies between qualitative and quantitative research.

          Originality/value

          Unlike many previous studies in the field of education, the authors’ account highlights how current mainstream approaches used for current global education policymaking often merely reproduces modern mainstream culture and accelerates the environmental crisis. It thus proposes to redirect educational research for a cultural shift, one that allows human society to move beyond the comforting rhetoric of sustainability and face the survivability imperative.

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          Most cited references60

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          Culture and the self: Implications for cognition, emotion, and motivation.

          Psychological Review, 98(2), 224-253
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            A good life for all within planetary boundaries

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              Predictors of public climate change awareness and risk perception around the world

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Journal of International Cooperation in Education
                JICE
                Emerald
                2755-029X
                2755-0303
                August 09 2022
                March 24 2023
                August 09 2022
                March 24 2023
                : 25
                : 1
                : 108-123
                Article
                10.1108/JICE-04-2022-0006
                9033e695-9bef-40c6-bdd4-8aa7fda99657
                © 2023

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