In the face of our current political and economic environment, particularly in the context of education, community and arts, dark clouds on our horizon have fast become storms. Storms raining down on us in the South Pacific with a force and subsequent devastation that is soul destroying. Some days I feel we might be in the eye of the storm and other days a glimmer of light sparkles off the rain from the aspirational agendas of UNESCO and our international organisations. But most days, it is dark clouds and storms. Thundering requests for more evidence, gales of economic cuts poorly disguised as enhancement projects, and rain that no arts educator can withstand alone. Where is the sheltering umbrella for a dancing academic in the university?...
Skjoldager-Nielsen discusses how dystopian works of art can compell us to act and hope in spite of t...
Climate change is a complex challenge. Addressing it successfully requires a mindset that draws dire...
To see the Earth in a grain of sand by the briefest of lightning flashes may be Homo sapiens's only ...
In the face of our current political and economic environment, particularly in the context of educat...
We are caught just now between acting in the face of an overwhelming environmental collapse, and try...
This issue of School Leadership Review comes at a time when many states and territories are dealing ...
More frequent and intense fires, floods, droughts and extreme temperatures point to a progressively ...
In this presentation, I explore the prospects for subjectivities that might collaborate with indigen...
Abstract: Policymakers and stakeholders across academia, industry, and governments internationally a...
Climate change is often reported in the context of wildfires and floods. Unfortunately, the persiste...
Students enrol in a PhD with a certain perception of the rigorous nature of this scholarly challenge...
Rethinking the work of academics in a time of pressing deadlines for climate action, this paper offe...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available ...
Strange weather is one of the growing ways human beings experience climate change phenomenologically...
This paper explores education as a context for facing what Susie Orbach has termed ‘climate sorrow’ ...
Skjoldager-Nielsen discusses how dystopian works of art can compell us to act and hope in spite of t...
Climate change is a complex challenge. Addressing it successfully requires a mindset that draws dire...
To see the Earth in a grain of sand by the briefest of lightning flashes may be Homo sapiens's only ...
In the face of our current political and economic environment, particularly in the context of educat...
We are caught just now between acting in the face of an overwhelming environmental collapse, and try...
This issue of School Leadership Review comes at a time when many states and territories are dealing ...
More frequent and intense fires, floods, droughts and extreme temperatures point to a progressively ...
In this presentation, I explore the prospects for subjectivities that might collaborate with indigen...
Abstract: Policymakers and stakeholders across academia, industry, and governments internationally a...
Climate change is often reported in the context of wildfires and floods. Unfortunately, the persiste...
Students enrol in a PhD with a certain perception of the rigorous nature of this scholarly challenge...
Rethinking the work of academics in a time of pressing deadlines for climate action, this paper offe...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available ...
Strange weather is one of the growing ways human beings experience climate change phenomenologically...
This paper explores education as a context for facing what Susie Orbach has termed ‘climate sorrow’ ...
Skjoldager-Nielsen discusses how dystopian works of art can compell us to act and hope in spite of t...
Climate change is a complex challenge. Addressing it successfully requires a mindset that draws dire...
To see the Earth in a grain of sand by the briefest of lightning flashes may be Homo sapiens's only ...