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[Commlist] 2020 Special edition "Exploring Eco-pedagogy and Digital Nature Connections" / open access Digital Culture and Education
Mon Jul 01 11:08:08 GMT 2019
Call for papers: 2020 Special edition of the open access /Digital
Culture and Education
<https://digitalcultureandeducation.squarespace.com>/ journal exploring
Eco-pedagogy and Digital Nature Connections.
Full paper submission due Nov. 30, 2019.
This 2020 special issue of the Digital Culture and Education open
access, online journal explores contemporary issues in digital
eco-pedagogy, particularly in relation to the education of children.
The worldwide youth climate strike on March 15 reflects young people’s
growing frustrations with the lack of political response to the
escalating ecological crisis. It also reflects the impact of efforts
already underway to highlight environmental concerns. The ecological
turn has been gaining ground in social and theoretical discourse since
at least the 1970s. During that time environmental education has been a
concept in progress. Early debates concerning the notion of
eco-citizenship and even the definition of nature itself express the
growing realisation that environmental stewardship in the age of the
Anthropocene (when humans dominate the earth) is a multi-dimensional
cultural project incorporating everything from emotional re-learning of
nature connectivity, through to eco-media literacy training, scientific
witnessing, philosophical/economic reassessment and citizen action.
Alongside this, the growing ubiquity of digital culture has fuelled
concern. In Last Child in the Woods (2008) Richard Louv blames the rise
of digital screen culture for what he calls children’s ‘nature-deficit
disorder’. Indeed, a 2013 study revealed that only 1 in 5 UK children
felt sufficiently connected with nature (rspb.org.uk/connectionmeasure
<http://rspb.org.uk/connectionmeasure>), raising the question of
potential consequences for those 40% of the world's species already at
risk of extinction and reliant upon human passion and dedication to save
them.
Nevertheless, the role that digital culture plays in this crisis is
still unclear and also in flux. Büscher’s (2016) concept of Nature 2.0
to describe the emerging digital representations of nature and networked
engagements with the natural world points to the growing research
interest in eco-digital cultures. Indeed, as Dobrin (2014: 205)
observes, digital environments are “themselves natures … environments in
and with which humans and non-humans forge relationships”. The ways that
digital culture and nature are becoming increasingly enmeshed invites
more discussion, particularly in relation to the role that
eco-pedagogies play within thesesocial and material assemblages. Recent
provocations include Fletcher’s (2017) discussion of the “environmental
values behaviour” gap between the mediated appreciation for nature,
versus the lack of societal commitment to conservation action. Whilst
nature-relatedness research (Richardson 2015, 2018) indicates that in
order to build a joyous connection with nature, children in particular
will often need to do so by focusing on the positives, free from the
impending fear of environmental collapse. More evidence is required to
help better understand the role that digital eco-pedagogy plays
regarding these sorts of tensions.
This special issue invites researchers to explore these contemporary
issues in digital eco-pedagogy.
Empirical studies are particularly welcome. Topics might include, but
are not limited to:
- Engaging pedagogy with mediated experiences of nature relatedness
- Interplays of real/virtual, action/simulation, inside/outside, the
physical world and digital space in environmental education
- Eco-media literacy, including awareness of the creative, economic and
material modes of digital production
- Progressive and social constructions of ecological citizenship
- Navigating the limits, as well as the potential benefits of digital
nature connections
- The intercultural, multi-dimensional, interdisciplinary and/or
inter-generational dimensions to eco-citizenship
- Digital eco-pedagogy and cultural theory
- The digital mediation of inter-species relationships
- Digital representations of climate change e.g. abstraction, versus
digital photo-realism
- Links between mediated play, expectations of nature and off-line
behaviours
- Digital green-washing
- Testing the educational and social impact of digital nature
connections across genres and platforms
- The use of portable, personalised, automated and/or ubiquitous
technologies in digital eco-pedagogy
- Digital eco-feminist interventions
- Digital citizen science initiatives
- Collaborative Design of digital nature
There is no charge to submit, or publish papers in the /Digital Culture
and Education /journal, which is a non-commercial, open access academic
journal that is distributed freely, at no charge.
5000 – 7000 word paper submission is due Nov 30, 2019. For author
guidelines please see
https://www.digitalcultureandeducation.com/submit-your-paper-1
Please direct your questions to Bronwin Patrickson at
(floatingblueseen /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(floatingblueseen /at/ gmail.com)> in the
first instance, or alternately Alexander Schmoelz at
(alexander.schmoeltz /at/ univie.ac.at) <mailto:(alexander.schmoeltz /at/ univie.ac.at)>
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