Troubling 'freedom': Silences in post-apartheid environmental education

The cultural history of South Africa in the transition from apartheid to democracy is a rich and complex story of the intricate inter-relations of education, (eco)politics, and social justice. As an Australian environmental education researcher working frequently in South Africa during 1998-99, I ha...

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Main Author: Noel Gough
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Environmental Association of Southern Africa 1999-12-01
Series:Southern African Journal of Environmental Education
Online Access:https://www.ajol.info/index.php/sajee/article/view/137339
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spelling doaj-e1cd9045d2a04c21848f2fb11e593c3e2020-11-25T02:30:12ZengEnvironmental Association of Southern AfricaSouthern African Journal of Environmental Education2411-59592411-59591999-12-0119Troubling 'freedom': Silences in post-apartheid environmental educationNoel GoughThe cultural history of South Africa in the transition from apartheid to democracy is a rich and complex story of the intricate inter-relations of education, (eco)politics, and social justice. As an Australian environmental education researcher working frequently in South Africa during 1998-99, I have welcomed the opportunity to explore these relationships in the light of South Africa's new 'freedom'. However, the freedom that has accompanied the constitutional abolition of apartheid implies a liberty beyond the world of legislative politics. South African educators have increasingly had the liberty to reject not only the determinisms of apartheid, but also to reject other social arrangements that supported its ideological machinery, such as patriarchy, sexism, ethnic nationalism, and class and language biases. Nevertheless, the literature of environmental education in South Africa remains for the most part silent on issues of race, class and gender. Thus, in this essay, I trouble the concept of 'freedom' in post apartheid environmental education by asking: what are South African environmental educators using their newly found freedom for?https://www.ajol.info/index.php/sajee/article/view/137339
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Noel Gough
spellingShingle Noel Gough
Troubling 'freedom': Silences in post-apartheid environmental education
Southern African Journal of Environmental Education
author_facet Noel Gough
author_sort Noel Gough
title Troubling 'freedom': Silences in post-apartheid environmental education
title_short Troubling 'freedom': Silences in post-apartheid environmental education
title_full Troubling 'freedom': Silences in post-apartheid environmental education
title_fullStr Troubling 'freedom': Silences in post-apartheid environmental education
title_full_unstemmed Troubling 'freedom': Silences in post-apartheid environmental education
title_sort troubling 'freedom': silences in post-apartheid environmental education
publisher Environmental Association of Southern Africa
series Southern African Journal of Environmental Education
issn 2411-5959
2411-5959
publishDate 1999-12-01
description The cultural history of South Africa in the transition from apartheid to democracy is a rich and complex story of the intricate inter-relations of education, (eco)politics, and social justice. As an Australian environmental education researcher working frequently in South Africa during 1998-99, I have welcomed the opportunity to explore these relationships in the light of South Africa's new 'freedom'. However, the freedom that has accompanied the constitutional abolition of apartheid implies a liberty beyond the world of legislative politics. South African educators have increasingly had the liberty to reject not only the determinisms of apartheid, but also to reject other social arrangements that supported its ideological machinery, such as patriarchy, sexism, ethnic nationalism, and class and language biases. Nevertheless, the literature of environmental education in South Africa remains for the most part silent on issues of race, class and gender. Thus, in this essay, I trouble the concept of 'freedom' in post apartheid environmental education by asking: what are South African environmental educators using their newly found freedom for?
url https://www.ajol.info/index.php/sajee/article/view/137339
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