ABSTRACT

This book is an introduction to the long history of human learning, the environment and sustainable development – about our struggles with the natural world: first for survival, then for dominance, currently for self-preservation, and in future perhaps, even for long-term, mutually beneficial co-existence. It charts the long arc of human–environment relationships through the specific lens of human learning, putting on record many of the people, ideas and events that have contributed, often unwittingly, to the global movement for sustainable development.

Human learning has always had a focus on the environment. It’s something we’ve been engaged in ever since we began interacting with our surroundings and thinking about the impacts, outcomes and consequences of our actions and interactions. This unique story told by the authors is episodic rather than a connected, linear account; it probes, questions and re-examines familiar issues from novel perspectives, and looks ahead. The book is of particular interest to those studying (and teaching) courses with a focus on socio-economic and environmental sustainability, and non-governmental organisations whose work brings them face-to-face with the general public and social enterprises.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

part I|86 pages

Past historic

chapter 1|3 pages

Humans being

chapter 2|3 pages

Playing and learning in the Mesolithic

chapter 3|3 pages

Earth Mother – Mother Earth

chapter 4|3 pages

In the beginning

chapter 5|3 pages

Virgil’s Georgics

chapter 6|4 pages

How the Greenland Norse chose

chapter 7|4 pages

Science and the ecological imagination

chapter 9|3 pages

Descartes, the world and the method

chapter 12|4 pages

The English Romantic poets

chapter 14|3 pages

Alexander von Humboldt

chapter 15|4 pages

John Clare’s enclosure

chapter 16|4 pages

Marx in nature

chapter 17|3 pages

Thoreau and Walden

chapter 18|4 pages

The significance of John Muir

chapter 19|3 pages

Friluftsliv

chapter 20|4 pages

Patrick Geddes

chapter 21|4 pages

John Dewey and the ecology of learning

chapter 22|3 pages

Blut und Boden

chapter 23|4 pages

This land is your land …

part II|72 pages

Present imperfect

chapter 24|4 pages

Rachel Carson’s silence

chapter 25|5 pages

The road to Tbilisi

chapter 26|3 pages

Gaia

chapter 27|3 pages

Forest school origins

chapter 28|5 pages

The early UN conferences

chapter 29|5 pages

Prepositions and the environment

chapter 30|4 pages

How deep is your ecology?

chapter 31|5 pages

Environmentally educated teachers

chapter 34|2 pages

The Earth Charter

chapter 35|4 pages

The behaviour of models

chapter 36|4 pages

The coming of ESD

chapter 37|4 pages

Green still does not always mean go

chapter 39|3 pages

In competence we trust

chapter 40|4 pages

Environmental learning

chapter 41|4 pages

Extinction? Rebellion?

part III|10 pages

Future possible

chapter 42|4 pages

Behind the cenes

What stories shall we tell?

chapter 43|4 pages

Being human