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Foster, John – Environmental Education Research, 2005
This paper sketches the fundamental characteristics of metaphorical language which enable it to subserve not only the shaping of particular discourses, but also crucial aspects of our powers of enquiry and understanding. It argues that without metaphorical creativity we cannot make adequate sense of the more complex and open-ended aspects of our…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Natural Resources, Rhetoric, Conservation (Environment)
Foster, John – Environmental Education Research, 2005
This paper examines the implications for sustainability policy of environmental uncertainty and indeterminacy, and relates the associated problems with a conventional understanding of sustainable development to Hayek's critique of collective planning. It suggests that the appropriate recourse is not, however, a Hayekian endorsement of the free…
Descriptors: Free Enterprise System, Sustainable Development, Public Policy, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedFoster, John – Environmental Education Research, 2002
The Dearing Report emphasized the idea of a 'learning society' as the new context of UK higher education, but conceived this on a model of adaptivity to economically- and technologically-driven change. While there are real shifts in social relations with which universities have to reckon, they can be understood on a much richer model of…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Environmental Education, Higher Education, Science and Society
Peer reviewedFoster, John – Environmental Education Research, 2001
Discusses the relationship between education and sustainability. Sustainability means humans, as individuals and societies, consciously trying to go with the grain of nature. Learning to understand the natural world and the human place in it can only be an active process through which our sense of what counts as going with the grain of nature is…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Environmental Influences, Higher Education, Learning

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