Towards a Political Education Through Environmental Issues. Melki Slimani

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       Education Set

      coordinated by

      Angela Barthes and Anne-Laure Le Guern

      Volume 8

      Towards a Political Education Through Environmental Issues

      Melki Slimani

      First published 2021 in Great Britain and the United States by ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

      Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms and licenses issued by the CLA. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside these terms should be sent to the publishers at the undermentioned address:

      ISTE Ltd

      27-37 St George’s Road

      London SW19 4EU

      UK

       www.iste.co.uk

      John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

      111 River Street

      Hoboken, NJ 07030

      USA

       www.wiley.com

      © ISTE Ltd 2021

      The rights of Melki Slimani to be identified as the author of this work have been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

      Library of Congress Control Number: 2020951823

      British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

      A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library

      ISBN 978-1-78630-588-6

      Foreword

      Laying Down the Principles of Intentional Political Curricula for the Anthropocene World

      Proposed in the early 2000s to researchers in the life sciences and geosciences by the geochemist Paul Crutzen, the notion of the Anthropocene seeks to emphasize the idea of anthropogenic changes, which affect all the outer layers of the planet (gases, liquids and solids) and profoundly modify its biogeophysical dynamics. Climate and biodiversity issues would be good examples of this. Such modifications would come to characterize this new geological era and thus replace the previous one, the Holocene. From a natural sciences perspective, the matter would prove controversial and be discussed within the International Commission on Stratigraphy. Nonetheless, it has paved the way for a new account of the interface between the social history of humans and the natural history of the planet (Beau and Larrère 2018).

      It is therefore a question of metanarratives and politics: a metanarrative because the idea of great acceleration and planetary limits is imposed on the whole of humanity by mixing scientific data and studies with mediatized discourses that stir up fears as well as hopes of another world and is therefore conceived as a mobilizer for the whole of humanity; and political because it tends to make people forget that these environmental and resource issues were historically rooted in 18th-century Europe (Fressoz 2012; Bonneuil and Fressoz 2013) and resulted from political choices that confirmed to the market the environmental risk in view and in favor of “extractivist” development. However, the contrary is true: the dissociation of time from nature, politics and social issues is at the root of the globalized environmental and social crises we are collectively facing (Theys 2015, 2019). Our way of living and thinking about the world is not fit for purpose (Lussault 2018).

      It subsequently becomes an educational issue, too. As Fressoz demonstrates, the school has been a major player in this historical process by disqualifying local knowledge, for example, in favor of scholarly knowledge alone, which is put at the service of a narrative of progress. It has also been a source of standardization, of a colonization of curricula, which Descarpentries (2018) describes as covertly epistemicidal and extractivist. Moreover, the school and the world of education, taken in their broadest sense, are also a means of collectively constructing another relationship with the world. Citizen groups, associations, activists, neighborhood committees and spontaneous youth movements have understood this. The United Nations General Assembly has also made this point strongly by voting in its plenary session on the role of education as a catalyst (SDG 4) for all the goals it adopted in 2015. We will add to this the issue of training and skills development for societal responsibilities (Barthes and Lange 2018).

      However, in the media and in formal education, environmental development issues are most often considered purely from a technical and economic angle. There is therefore a need to put education at the service of the collective development geared towards a new way of inhabiting the world, which implies changing our relationship to crises, uncertainty, resilience and, therefore, to the highly hierarchical productive worlds and forms of knowledge transmission in our societies. These desirable transformations lead us to focus our attention on a certain number of key and determining points in terms of content. The questions of scales (in terms of time, space and complexity), the relationship with others (otherness, multiculturalism, multi-referentiality) and the relationship with nature, resources and production are all benchmarks

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