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Eco-anxiety and a Desire for Hope: A Composite Article on the Impacts of Climate Change in Environmental Education

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posted on 2025-05-28, 11:30 authored by Scott Jukes, Robyn Fox, David Hills, Peta WhitePeta White, Joe FergusonJoe Ferguson, Amrita KamathAmrita Kamath, Marianne Logan, Kathryn Riley, David Rousell, Sandra Wooltorton, Hilary Whitehouse
Abstract Responding to increasing concerns regarding human-induced climate change and shared commitment as environmental educators to support climate action, we crafted this article as a composite piece — an emerging method of inquiry. We are eleven contributors: the Editorial Executive of the Australian Journal of Environmental Education and two colleagues who each respond to prompts concerning our experience of climate change and our practices of climate change education. The responses provide insights regarding how we strive to enact meaningful climate action, education, advocacy and agency. This article presents the reader with various ways environmental educators work through eco-anxiety and engage in active hope when supporting climate change education/agency/action. The following insights emerged, illustrating 1. the significance of embracing diverse perspectives and knowledge systems; 2. Emotions as catalysts for action and activism; 3. the value of fostering collaborative spaces/relationships/communities that empower people; 4. the importance of integrating ethical responses and critical climate literacy in climate change education/research; 5. learning from places and multi-species entanglements; 6. acknowledging tensions. We offer these six insights not as a solution but as a potentially generative heuristic for navigating the complexity and uncertainty of climate change education in contemporary times.

History

Journal

Australian Journal of Environmental Education

Volume

40

Pagination

811-830

Location

Cambridge, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0814-0626

eISSN

2049-775X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

5

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

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