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ECOJUSTICE THEORY
   & PEDAGOGY

           Kurt Love, Ph.D.
  Central Connecticut State University
Ecojustice Pedagogy

Main Focus: Resisting a colonizing culture of
consumerism by engaging in practices connected to the
cultural commons
Major Contributors: Chet Bowers, Rebecca
Martusewicz, Kelly Young
Ecojustice Teaching Practice


Students will be more able to:

  Identify sustainable social and
  ecological relationships

  Connect with intergenerational
  knowledges
Ecojustice Teaching Practice
Students will be more able to:

  Decrease the influence of the
  media and consumerism:
  Mental, emotional, and spiritual
  liberation !om brand names
  enslavement

  Be more culturally inclusive and
  have a greater awareness of
  interconnectedness, nurturance,
  and reciprocity
Roots of
    Ecojustice Pedagogy
Ecofeminism - a feminist theory that describes the
relationship between nature and women; includes an
analysis of the added burden that women face,
especially in third-world nations, when environment is
compromised.
Indigenous Education - rooted in Native American
cultures and philosophies; includes a focus on humans
as part of nature living with reciprocity.
Summary Points of Ecojustice Theory
1. Eliminating eco-racism

2. Revitalizing the commons to create a balance between market
   and non-market aspects of community life

3. Ending the industrialized nations’ exploitation and cultural
   colonization of third-world nations

4. Ensure that the hubris and ideology of Western industrial
   culture does not diminish future generations’ ways of living and
   quality of life

5. Support an “Earth Democracy”--the right of nature to flourish
   rather than be contingent upon the demands of humans
                   From ecojusticeeducation.org
ECO-RACISM
Eco-racism
Eco-racism - the relationship between poor
environmental conditions and peoples of color and
lower socioeconomic classes disproportionately living
in those conditions.
Peoples of third-world nations
Environmental conditions of poor neighborhoods in
cities
REVITALIZING THE
CULTURAL COMMONS
Revitalizing the
       Cultural Commons
Cultural Commons

  Naturals systems (water, air, soil, forests, oceans, etc.)

  Cultural patterns and traditions (intergenerational knowledge
  ranging from growing and preparing food, medicinal practices,
  arts, music, crafts, ceremonies, etc.)

  Shared with little or no cost by all members of the community
  nature of the commons varies in terms of different cultures and
  bioregions

  The basis of mutual support systems and local democracy
Ladakh and the Loss of the
   Cultural Commons
Ancient Futures

  Ladakh Part 1

  Ladakh serves as an example
  of what happens when
  communities lose their
  cultural commons
Revitalizing the
      Cultural Commons
Increases dialogue          Diffuses social power
                            imbalances
Invests in relationships
                            Strengthens
Increases ecologically      democratic
sustainable practices       participation
Revitalizes the arts        Strengthens local
Lessens the volatility of   control
economic systems
Cultural Commons &
     Strong Democracy
Cultural commons create a “strong democracy” and resist a
“weak democracy”

Strong democracy is when people are actively involved in
creating their community through dialogue, thought, and
action.

Weak democracy is when people remain inactive, distracted
(largely by practices of consumerism, pleasure and anti-
intellectualism), and disengaged in the process of creating
their community.
The Cultural Commons
   as Your Classroom
Artists       Native Americans
Elders        Politicians
Journalists   Experts in various areas
Historians    Community workers &
              organizers
Mechanics
              Radio show hosts
Writers
              Athletes
Poets
The Cultural Commons
   as Your Classroom
Food shares             Museums

Community gardens       Libraries

Transportation shares   Art shows

Traditional knowledge   Craft shows
shares
                        Lectures
Technology shares
                        Farms
Clothing swaps
Revitalizing the
     Cultural Commons

What are specific examples
of the cultural commons in
our community?
UCONN Mentor Connection 2007
1. John Callendrelli (CT Chapter of Sierra Club)
2.Kathleen Holgersen (UCONN Women’s Center)
3.Lauren Bentancourt (Miss Connecticut 2007)
4.Dale Carson (Native American Elder - Abenaki)
5.Ned Lamont (Democratic Candidate for CT Senate 2006)
6.Matthew Hart (Mansfield Town Manager)
7.Chet Bowers (Ecojustice Professor, University of Oregon)
8.Laurie Perez (Journalist, Fox 61 News)
9.Bobby Sherwood & Colin McEnroe (Producer & Talk Show Host WTIC
  1080AM Radio)
EXPLOITING PEOPLES
A Brief History of Peoples (Part 1)

Earth-Based Cultures                   Industrial Culture
             First Nations     Genocide
Indigenous
             Africans
                             Colonization
                             Enslavement

                                  Assimilation
             Aborigines

Tens of Thousands of          Focus on colonization, Western
   Years of Earth-             globalization, technology, and
 Centered Approach             profit above relationship with
                                           Earth
A Brief History of Peoples (Part 2)

“Third World” or “Developing”                 Industrial Culture
                     Africa         Ignored
   Impoverished
                   East Asia
                               Globalization
                               Enslavement

                                       Dumping Grounds
                    Central &
                  South America
   Disease, poverty, war-         Exploit peoples for the purposes
    stricken, desperate            of making profits, unless they
         conditions                    have nothing to offer
Industrialized Nations Exploiting
     Third-World Nations

Economic exploitation via
cheap labor:

Current business practices
from transnational
corporations in
industrialized nations

  Sweat shop labor
U.S. Exploitation of Hawai`i


Cultural colonization via
globalization or “global
Westernization”

  Hawaii

  Molokai
HUBRIS & IDEOLOGY
Hubris and Ideology
Root metaphors:
Words that carry forward cultural value systems; these are often mystified

   Examples:

      Individualism

      Progress

      Technology

      Savage

      The Corporation
Is “Progress”
Ecologically Sustainable?
Progress                      Sustainability

  Technology                    Cooperation

  Individuality/Isolation       Reciprocity

  Capitalism                    Nurturance

  Competition                   Interconnectedness with
                                each other and with
  Movement away from            nature
  nature
  “Progress” as typically defined in the first world
     nations is the opposite of “sustainability”
Evolution and
        Social Darwinism
Biological evolutionary theory argues for the “survival
of the fittest”
Darwin argued that poor people should not be having
children because they will create more poor people.
The social elites (during the Victorian period) greatly
favored this argument.
Applied Social Darwinism
How has Social Darwinism been applied to
or connected with:

   Native Americans?

   African Americans (during slavery,
   segregation, currently)

   Australian Aborigines?

   Eugenics?

   Nazi scientists?

   Capitalistic practices? Free-market
   practices?
EARTH DEMOCRACY
Earth Democracy
Earth has a right to thrive and not
be contingent on the needs of
humans

Humans are not separate from
nature and live in balance with
nature

Humans not taking resources from
nature or creating concentrations
of pollution that destroy the
environment                           Vandana Shiva, 1952-
Externalities from The Corporation
Living Sustainably in Cuba



Cuba Video
“Shapeshifter”
 Brian Jungen
Plastic Ocean

Millions of tons of
plastic collectively
at least the size of
 Texas floating in
the Pacific Ocean
Plastic Ocean
Millions of tons of      About 6 times more
plastic collectively   plastic than plankton - a
at least the size of    major food source for
 Texas floating in               animals
the Pacific Ocean



  CNN Report
ECOLOGICAL
 IDENTITIES
Your Ecological Identity

Who are you?
What is your history?
To what extent are you
defined more by
technology or by
nature?
Footpath = Your View of Reality?
Home                                Building
                  Nature?
  Sidewalk                      Sidewalk


       Driveway              Parking Lot


                   Vehicle
Our View of Ecology
    Creates Our Culture
Our ecology is anthropocentric
Our daily living ecology is seen as being separate from
nature.
Our technology is our ecology!
  Because our culture is separate from nature, our
  culture is separate from ancient wisdoms which are
  sustainable practices of living with each other and
  living with the Earth and all its inhabitants.
Technology = Ecology
What happens to people
when technology
replaces ecology as the
main viewpoint of
“reality”?

Do we see buildings as
“progress” and areas of
nature as “empty lots?”
Technology & the
         Ecological Self
How have our identities been shaped and reshaped by the
larger cultural mindset of “progress” and technology?

Is ours a Western Industrial Culture?
Consumer Culture?

What has become of our culture? knowledge? economics?
value systems? health? relationships? views of dependence
and interdependence? views of interconnectedness?
systems of power? equity?equality? religion? sex?
spirituality?
Western Industrial Education

Technocistic - methods, tests, static view of knowledge

Technology uncritically viewed as inherently “good”

Devaluing nature, valuing human “progress”

Monoculture - Western Globalization

Capitalism, competition, profit

Devaluing interconnectedness

Short-term views over long-term relationships
ECOJUSTICE
 PEDAGOGY
Ecojustice Pedagogy

Community-Based Learning
Questioning “root metaphors” in language
Questioning human domination over nature practices
Exposing “technology as our ecology” in curriculum
Analyzing history through an anti-anthropocentric lens
Ecojustice
                 Teaching Methods
 Exploring the intersections of
cultural value system and ecology
 1. Teacher-as-mediator

 2. Exploring anthropocentric
    thinking and language

 3. Using the cultural commons
    as place-based learning
    experiences

 4. Deconstructing our
    technological/ecological selves
Ecojustice
   Methods and Examples

Community Garden

Green Construction
(Earthships Part 1 & Part 2)

Sustainable Practices within a School
(Composting, gardening, raising chickens, recycling,
solar water heating, solar power, hydrogen fuel
cell, greenhouse, etc.)
Example: Common Ground High School in New
Haven
Ecojustice
   Methods and Examples
Sustainable Energy Projects
(How can sustainable energy be used in the
community?)

Community Mapping
(What is in our immediate neighborhood? What
sustainable practices are already in our
neighborhood? What possibilities are there for
more?)

Sustainable Feast
(Using food only in season and within 100 miles)

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Ecojustice Pedagogy

  • 1. ECOJUSTICE THEORY & PEDAGOGY Kurt Love, Ph.D. Central Connecticut State University
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4. Ecojustice Pedagogy Main Focus: Resisting a colonizing culture of consumerism by engaging in practices connected to the cultural commons Major Contributors: Chet Bowers, Rebecca Martusewicz, Kelly Young
  • 5. Ecojustice Teaching Practice Students will be more able to: Identify sustainable social and ecological relationships Connect with intergenerational knowledges
  • 6. Ecojustice Teaching Practice Students will be more able to: Decrease the influence of the media and consumerism: Mental, emotional, and spiritual liberation !om brand names enslavement Be more culturally inclusive and have a greater awareness of interconnectedness, nurturance, and reciprocity
  • 7. Roots of Ecojustice Pedagogy Ecofeminism - a feminist theory that describes the relationship between nature and women; includes an analysis of the added burden that women face, especially in third-world nations, when environment is compromised. Indigenous Education - rooted in Native American cultures and philosophies; includes a focus on humans as part of nature living with reciprocity.
  • 8. Summary Points of Ecojustice Theory 1. Eliminating eco-racism 2. Revitalizing the commons to create a balance between market and non-market aspects of community life 3. Ending the industrialized nations’ exploitation and cultural colonization of third-world nations 4. Ensure that the hubris and ideology of Western industrial culture does not diminish future generations’ ways of living and quality of life 5. Support an “Earth Democracy”--the right of nature to flourish rather than be contingent upon the demands of humans From ecojusticeeducation.org
  • 10. Eco-racism Eco-racism - the relationship between poor environmental conditions and peoples of color and lower socioeconomic classes disproportionately living in those conditions. Peoples of third-world nations Environmental conditions of poor neighborhoods in cities
  • 12. Revitalizing the Cultural Commons Cultural Commons Naturals systems (water, air, soil, forests, oceans, etc.) Cultural patterns and traditions (intergenerational knowledge ranging from growing and preparing food, medicinal practices, arts, music, crafts, ceremonies, etc.) Shared with little or no cost by all members of the community nature of the commons varies in terms of different cultures and bioregions The basis of mutual support systems and local democracy
  • 13. Ladakh and the Loss of the Cultural Commons Ancient Futures Ladakh Part 1 Ladakh serves as an example of what happens when communities lose their cultural commons
  • 14. Revitalizing the Cultural Commons Increases dialogue Diffuses social power imbalances Invests in relationships Strengthens Increases ecologically democratic sustainable practices participation Revitalizes the arts Strengthens local Lessens the volatility of control economic systems
  • 15. Cultural Commons & Strong Democracy Cultural commons create a “strong democracy” and resist a “weak democracy” Strong democracy is when people are actively involved in creating their community through dialogue, thought, and action. Weak democracy is when people remain inactive, distracted (largely by practices of consumerism, pleasure and anti- intellectualism), and disengaged in the process of creating their community.
  • 16. The Cultural Commons as Your Classroom Artists Native Americans Elders Politicians Journalists Experts in various areas Historians Community workers & organizers Mechanics Radio show hosts Writers Athletes Poets
  • 17. The Cultural Commons as Your Classroom Food shares Museums Community gardens Libraries Transportation shares Art shows Traditional knowledge Craft shows shares Lectures Technology shares Farms Clothing swaps
  • 18. Revitalizing the Cultural Commons What are specific examples of the cultural commons in our community?
  • 19. UCONN Mentor Connection 2007 1. John Callendrelli (CT Chapter of Sierra Club) 2.Kathleen Holgersen (UCONN Women’s Center) 3.Lauren Bentancourt (Miss Connecticut 2007) 4.Dale Carson (Native American Elder - Abenaki) 5.Ned Lamont (Democratic Candidate for CT Senate 2006) 6.Matthew Hart (Mansfield Town Manager) 7.Chet Bowers (Ecojustice Professor, University of Oregon) 8.Laurie Perez (Journalist, Fox 61 News) 9.Bobby Sherwood & Colin McEnroe (Producer & Talk Show Host WTIC 1080AM Radio)
  • 21. A Brief History of Peoples (Part 1) Earth-Based Cultures Industrial Culture First Nations Genocide Indigenous Africans Colonization Enslavement Assimilation Aborigines Tens of Thousands of Focus on colonization, Western Years of Earth- globalization, technology, and Centered Approach profit above relationship with Earth
  • 22. A Brief History of Peoples (Part 2) “Third World” or “Developing” Industrial Culture Africa Ignored Impoverished East Asia Globalization Enslavement Dumping Grounds Central & South America Disease, poverty, war- Exploit peoples for the purposes stricken, desperate of making profits, unless they conditions have nothing to offer
  • 23. Industrialized Nations Exploiting Third-World Nations Economic exploitation via cheap labor: Current business practices from transnational corporations in industrialized nations Sweat shop labor
  • 24. U.S. Exploitation of Hawai`i Cultural colonization via globalization or “global Westernization” Hawaii Molokai
  • 26. Hubris and Ideology Root metaphors: Words that carry forward cultural value systems; these are often mystified Examples: Individualism Progress Technology Savage The Corporation
  • 27. Is “Progress” Ecologically Sustainable? Progress Sustainability Technology Cooperation Individuality/Isolation Reciprocity Capitalism Nurturance Competition Interconnectedness with each other and with Movement away from nature nature “Progress” as typically defined in the first world nations is the opposite of “sustainability”
  • 28. Evolution and Social Darwinism Biological evolutionary theory argues for the “survival of the fittest” Darwin argued that poor people should not be having children because they will create more poor people. The social elites (during the Victorian period) greatly favored this argument.
  • 29. Applied Social Darwinism How has Social Darwinism been applied to or connected with: Native Americans? African Americans (during slavery, segregation, currently) Australian Aborigines? Eugenics? Nazi scientists? Capitalistic practices? Free-market practices?
  • 31. Earth Democracy Earth has a right to thrive and not be contingent on the needs of humans Humans are not separate from nature and live in balance with nature Humans not taking resources from nature or creating concentrations of pollution that destroy the environment Vandana Shiva, 1952- Externalities from The Corporation
  • 32. Living Sustainably in Cuba Cuba Video
  • 34. Plastic Ocean Millions of tons of plastic collectively at least the size of Texas floating in the Pacific Ocean
  • 35. Plastic Ocean Millions of tons of About 6 times more plastic collectively plastic than plankton - a at least the size of major food source for Texas floating in animals the Pacific Ocean CNN Report
  • 37. Your Ecological Identity Who are you? What is your history? To what extent are you defined more by technology or by nature?
  • 38. Footpath = Your View of Reality? Home Building Nature? Sidewalk Sidewalk Driveway Parking Lot Vehicle
  • 39. Our View of Ecology Creates Our Culture Our ecology is anthropocentric Our daily living ecology is seen as being separate from nature. Our technology is our ecology! Because our culture is separate from nature, our culture is separate from ancient wisdoms which are sustainable practices of living with each other and living with the Earth and all its inhabitants.
  • 40. Technology = Ecology What happens to people when technology replaces ecology as the main viewpoint of “reality”? Do we see buildings as “progress” and areas of nature as “empty lots?”
  • 41. Technology & the Ecological Self How have our identities been shaped and reshaped by the larger cultural mindset of “progress” and technology? Is ours a Western Industrial Culture? Consumer Culture? What has become of our culture? knowledge? economics? value systems? health? relationships? views of dependence and interdependence? views of interconnectedness? systems of power? equity?equality? religion? sex? spirituality?
  • 42. Western Industrial Education Technocistic - methods, tests, static view of knowledge Technology uncritically viewed as inherently “good” Devaluing nature, valuing human “progress” Monoculture - Western Globalization Capitalism, competition, profit Devaluing interconnectedness Short-term views over long-term relationships
  • 44. Ecojustice Pedagogy Community-Based Learning Questioning “root metaphors” in language Questioning human domination over nature practices Exposing “technology as our ecology” in curriculum Analyzing history through an anti-anthropocentric lens
  • 45. Ecojustice Teaching Methods Exploring the intersections of cultural value system and ecology 1. Teacher-as-mediator 2. Exploring anthropocentric thinking and language 3. Using the cultural commons as place-based learning experiences 4. Deconstructing our technological/ecological selves
  • 46. Ecojustice Methods and Examples Community Garden Green Construction (Earthships Part 1 & Part 2) Sustainable Practices within a School (Composting, gardening, raising chickens, recycling, solar water heating, solar power, hydrogen fuel cell, greenhouse, etc.) Example: Common Ground High School in New Haven
  • 47. Ecojustice Methods and Examples Sustainable Energy Projects (How can sustainable energy be used in the community?) Community Mapping (What is in our immediate neighborhood? What sustainable practices are already in our neighborhood? What possibilities are there for more?) Sustainable Feast (Using food only in season and within 100 miles)