Ecojustice education and communitarianism: Exploring the possibility for African eco-communitarianism

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Authors

Kruger, Frans
le Roux, Adré
Teise, Kevin

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Taylor and Francis Group

Abstract

In this article, we explore the concept of African communitarianism and reflect on its potential value for ecojustice education as a localised response to the wider ecological crises that impacts on African communities. We argue for an African eco-communitarian perspective and propose that this perspective extends ecojustice education. Such extension occurs firstly through foregrounding and emphasising the establishment of harmonious and co-constitutive relationships that is characterised by intersubjectivity and secondly, by extending community to beyond humans (and ancestors) to be inclusive of the more-than human world. We contend that ecojustice education, framed within an African eco-communitarianism, constitutes a localised response to the ecological crises in the form of critical place-based education, that it enables co-constitutive dialogue and interaction between the human and non-human elements of an eco-community and is an ethico-political praxis characterised by an African environmental ethic.

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Kruger, F., le Roux, A. and Teise, K. 2019. Ecojustice education and communitarianism: Exploring the possibility for African eco-communitarianism’, Educational Philosophy and Theory, 52(2), pp. 206–216. doi: 10.1080/00131857.2019.1625769.

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