1st Edition
Asian Perspectives on Education for Sustainable Development
This book critically considers what various Asian philosophies can contribute to a more substantive discourse on sustainability education and educational philosophy.
The contributors examine how ‘east’ and ‘west’ interact in educational philosophy and practice in Asian contexts. As a collection, they provide a broad view of Asian sustainability thinking that is not dominated by Confucianism, Buddhism, Islam, and post-colonialism, but rather which regards these themes—and other frameworks for sustainable education—as dynamic aspects of Asian contexts, both historically and today. As such, the book invites readers to consider the challenges and opportunities for theorising of sustainability in the philosophy of education, while also critically engaging with the way in which ‘Asia’ and ‘east’ are typically understood.
Of interest to those researchers in Asian conceptions of sustainability, this book highlights a series of potential insights in relation to the often-foregrounded perspectives of Global North and western-based frameworks.
The chapters were originally published in Educational Philosophy and Theory.
Introduction: ‘Asian’ Perspectives on Education for Sustainable Development
Liz Jackson
1. Ethnic Tourism and the Big Song: Public Pedagogies and the Ambiguity of Environmental Discourse in Southwest China
Jinting Wu
2. Vernadsky meets Yulgok: A non-Western dialog on sustainability
Tamara Savelyeva
3. Rethinking the Concept of Sustainability: Hiroshima as a subject of peace education
Kanako Ide
4. Educating the Heart and the Mind: Conceptualizing inclusive pedagogy for sustainable development
Mousumi Mukherjee
5. No-Self, Natural Sustainability and Education for Sustainable Development
Chia-Ling Wang
6. Harmonizing ecological sustainability and higher education development: Wisdom from Chinese ancient education philosophy
Xiaoxia Chen
Biography
Liz Jackson is an Associate Professor and the Director of the Comparative Education Research Centre at the Faculty of Education at the University of Hong Kong. She is also the President of the Philosophy of Education Society of Australasia. She is the author of Muslims and Islam in U.S. Education: Reconsidering Multiculturalism (2014) and Questioning Allegiance: Resituating Civic Education (2019). She is currently working on a third book entitled Against Virtue: The Politics of Educating Emotions.