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In: Transgressions: Cultural Studies and Education 16
In: Educational Research E-Books Online, Collection 2005-2017, ISBN: 9789004394001
Preliminary Material -- The case for synthesis -- Utopia revisited -- Parallel worlds -- Collective decisions -- Thinking for oneself -- Community engagement -- Commonsense inquiry -- Integrative management -- A holistic focus -- A Just, secure and sustainable future -- Bibliography -- List of boxes -- Index -- Transgressions: Cultural Studies and Education Series.
In: Futures, Band 65, S. 209-216
In: Urban policy and research, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 41-44
ISSN: 1476-7244
In: Community development journal, Band 18, Heft 3, S. 214-221
ISSN: 1468-2656
In: Garland studies on the elderly in America
In: The International Journal of Knowledge, Culture, and Change Management: Annual Review, Band 6, Heft 3, S. 43-56
ISSN: 1447-9575
This toolkit is designed to help anyone who wants to develop, design or conduct community engagement processes, or to be part of them. It has a particular focus on engaging communities in natural resource management issues in Australia's Murray-Darling Basin, but much of the material is applicable to almost any kind of community engagement, anywhere.The toolkit has been written for the Murray-Darling Basin Commission, but we hope it will help a range of stakeholders – in fact all those people who have an interest in a more sustainable future. It is particularly relevant to you if you are responsible for making decisions about community engagement processes.You could be a staff member or volunteer from a government, nongovernment, industry or private sector organisation.You could be a member of a catchment management organisation or other regional group involved in natural resource management.
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ISSUE ADDRESSED: Reports of the degeneration of Earth's natural life-support systems have focused the minds of those in the scientific, political and general communities on how to avert a collapse. For many health promotion practitioners the effective unit of social change is the community, the interconnected web of people and place that makes up a human living system. The challenge lies in determining just what makes up a sustainable community under 21st Century conditions. METHOD: This paper reviews major national and international programs working towards sustainable communities, in order to arrive at strategies that establish the necessary interconnectedness and collective action within each individual community. RESULTS: Moving to a sustainable community under these conditions appears to meet the conditions of a 'wicked problem', that is, one that lies outside the present capacity of the society to resolve it. The move therefore calls for guided social change. CONCLUSION: The priorities for guiding the change to a sustainable community involve collective thinking and action as a mutual learning process among the affected individuals, communities, experts, and organisations, towards a holistic sustainability goal.
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ISSUE ADDRESSED: Reports of the degeneration of Earth's natural life-support systems have focused the minds of those in the scientific, political and general communities on how to avert a collapse. For many health promotion practitioners the effective unit of social change is the community, the interconnected web of people and place that makes up a human living system. The challenge lies in determining just what makes up a sustainable community under 21st Century conditions. METHOD: This paper reviews major national and international programs working towards sustainable communities, in order to arrive at strategies that establish the necessary interconnectedness and collective action within each individual community. RESULTS: Moving to a sustainable community under these conditions appears to meet the conditions of a 'wicked problem', that is, one that lies outside the present capacity of the society to resolve it. The move therefore calls for guided social change. CONCLUSION: The priorities for guiding the change to a sustainable community involve collective thinking and action as a mutual learning process among the affected individuals, communities, experts, and organisations, towards a holistic sustainability goal.
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Thinking for oneself : outside the square / Valerie A. Brown -- Collective learning : joining the dots / Valerie A. Brown, Judith A. Lambert & John A. Harris -- Multiple dimensions of mind : parts and wholes / Valerie A. Brown -- Celebrating difference : on not losing one's mind / David Waltner-Toews & Ellen Wall -- Multiple minds : the more we are together / John A. Harris -- Multiple voices : so say all of us / Valerie A. Brown & John A. Harris -- Post-normal reconciliation : reframing the agenda / Kerry A. Arabena -- Sophia in the anthropocene : towards an environmental ethic / Dianne E. Dibley -- The organic, the mechanical and the emergent mind / Charles J. Massy -- Escaping the "circular conundrum" : cropping and learning in Northern Australia / Kathryn E. Andrews -- Epidemiological regeneration in a complex world / David Waltner-Toews -- Landscape management and landscape regeneration in Australia / Richard M. Thackway & Mark W. Gardner -- Transcoherence : labels and wicked problems / Craig A. Ashurst -- Re-imagining person-centred practice in a person-first organisation / Julia H. Wolfson -- Engaging creatively with tension in collaborative research / Elizabeth A Clarke, Rebecca Freeth, and Dena Fam -- Life and change for a regenerative farmer / David S. Marsh -- That's how the light gets in / David Waltner-Toews -- Knowing our own minds / David Waltner-Teows, Valerie A. Brown & John A. Harris.
Radical changes in the biosphere and human interaction with the environment are increasingly impacting on the health of populations across the world. Diseases are crossing the species barrier, and spreading rapidly through globalised transport systems. From new patterns of cancer to the threat of global pandemics, it is imperative that public health practitioners acknowledge the interdependence between the sustainability of the environment and the sustainability of the human species* Why are issues of global and local sustainability of increasing impotance to the public's health?* Why do issue