Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 December 2024
The fundamental challenge of sustainability goes far beyond that of environmentalism. The question is whether we can fulfil our unique potential as human beings, to understand our behaviour and its consequences. To do this, we must review every area of human life [and] … transcend the current limitations on our thinking if we are to become aware and rational beings in a way that no other species has ever had to do or been able to do before.
Clayton & Radcliffe (1996)A WELCOME
One of the benefits of getting older is gaining an overview of things. You obtain a clearer standpoint from which to view trends, patterns, and changes. All too quickly, you also find yourself journeyed from a young advocate, passionate about the environment and education and keen to learn, to one of the old guard, still committed but possibly a bit wiser about the possibilities of and barriers to change. Welcome to this selection of my writing – a project I had in mind long before it finally came to fruition, and one which reflects my learning journey to date.
This Introduction outlines the purpose of the Reader and provides a context for what follows – including some background on the philosophical orientation that informs my writing. I’ve been working in environmental and sustainability education for some five decades, first inspired as a young man by the wave of environmentalism of the early 1970s. The calls for change towards a more sustainable and equitable society – ever present throughout those fifty years – have become much more insistent and urgent of late as clear evidence of critical global issues mounts and existential questions about achieving a viable future for humanity have become unavoidable.
In response, this book aims to contribute a timely and original perspective on the key issue of how learning and education can make a decisive difference to securing the future in an increasingly uncertain and threatened world. It is based on a core of previously published papers and articles which are here booked-ended by six new chapters (including this prefacing chapter), and it is offered as an introduction to my work and field of inquiry over a long period. Full details of the previously published chapters are listed under “Credits” on pp. 233–4.
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