TY - UNPB
T1 - Education at the intersection of environmental, epistemic and transitional justices: An initial scoping review
AU - Espinal Meza, Silvia
AU - Ajok, Patricia
AU - Balarin, Maria
AU - Karki, Mrigendra
AU - Komakech, Daniel
AU - Monge, Carlos
AU - Nuwategeka, Expedito
AU - Paudel, Mohan
AU - Paulson, Julia
AU - Kurawa, Gwadabe
AU - Ranabhat, Srijana
AU - Sarmiento, Paola
AU - Shields, Robin A
AU - Singh, Ashik
AU - Bahadur Singh, Ganesh
AU - Wilder, Rachel
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - This paper is the final of four theoretical background papers for JustEd – a research project that aims to understand how secondary school learners' knowledge and experiences of environmental, epistemic and transitional justice, in and out of school, relate to learners’ intended actions with respect to SDG 13 (climate action) and SDG 16 (peace) in Nepal, Peru and Uganda. This paper starts to identify the links between these justices in education and points to the ways that they can be complementary to, and enriching of, social justice perspectives. Through exploring the links across the three justices, we suggest that there are two key relationships between education and these multiple justices. The first is education as a means to achieve different forms of justice in the ways that education can lead to justice, for example, how access to schooling is considered a distribution of resources, or how learning about past conflict could enable positive peace. The second is education as an (un)just space in the ways that teaching/learning processes and social practices in classrooms, schools and in the wider environment reflect and embody different forms of justice.
AB - This paper is the final of four theoretical background papers for JustEd – a research project that aims to understand how secondary school learners' knowledge and experiences of environmental, epistemic and transitional justice, in and out of school, relate to learners’ intended actions with respect to SDG 13 (climate action) and SDG 16 (peace) in Nepal, Peru and Uganda. This paper starts to identify the links between these justices in education and points to the ways that they can be complementary to, and enriching of, social justice perspectives. Through exploring the links across the three justices, we suggest that there are two key relationships between education and these multiple justices. The first is education as a means to achieve different forms of justice in the ways that education can lead to justice, for example, how access to schooling is considered a distribution of resources, or how learning about past conflict could enable positive peace. The second is education as an (un)just space in the ways that teaching/learning processes and social practices in classrooms, schools and in the wider environment reflect and embody different forms of justice.
M3 - Working paper
BT - Education at the intersection of environmental, epistemic and transitional justices: An initial scoping review
ER -