News & Events - Wednesday, June 11, 2008 2:52

Call for papers – Journal of Agricultural Education & Extension

Journal of Agricultural Education & Extension

Special issue on: Mediated cross-cultural learning in the pursuit of sustainability

Edited by Nadarajah Sriskandarajah - Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala and Arjen Wals – Wageningen University, The Netherlands

Call for papers

As the mantra of sustainability continues to gain momentum around the world, it becomes increasingly clear that the creation of a world that is more sustainable than the one currently in prospect requires, at least in part, a break with the past. What appear to be needed are new forms of learning and innovation that will enable us to escape from existing routines and systems that are both notoriously persistent and inherently unsustainable. Research from seemingly unrelated fields of inquiry such as; social psychology, business management, education and ecology, suggests that the breaking of stubborn routines and the creation of a new culture or system grounded in a different set of values, above all hinges on the presence of pluralism and space for meaningful interaction and confrontation. Apparently pluralism and dissonance, when properly introduced, cultivated, managed and utilized, can lead to the kind of energy, creativity and ‘Gestaltswitch’ necessary to move closer towards sustainability.

This special issue explores carefully designed education and extension programmes that can be characterized by ‘learning on the edges’ or the kind of learning that emerges when heterogeneous groups of learners interact around issues of sustainability (i.e. sustainable resource management, sustainable land-use, sustainable chain management, sustainable food production & consumption).

We use the phrase ‘mediated cross-cultural learning’ to emphasize the importance of facilitated, guided and (co)designed learning activities that have a cross-cultural component. Cross-cultural should be interpreted broadly to include learners who have different cultural backgrounds (i.e. learning on the interface between cities and rural areas would also be considered as cross-cultural as would an international IT-supported course on sustainable agriculture involving students form different countries). The theme issue ideally features examples of research from both formal and non-formal learning environments.

Submission of manuscripts

The Journal of Agricultural Education & Extension is an English-language publication. Manuscripts should be written in clear, accessible language, which can be understood by those outside the authors’ area of specialization. Submission of a manuscript implies a commitment to publish in this Journal. Only manuscripts which have not been previously published, and are not currently under consideration for publication by another Journal are acceptable. Exceptions may be made in cases of manuscripts published in the proceedings of a conference or translated from another language. Please edit your text as little as possible: no tabs or indentations, and suchlike. Papers should not exceed 6,000 words (including tables, figures and references). All authors should provide a cover page which lists the following contact details: names of author/s, address of corresponding author, telephone, fax and email address.

Your submission should be emailed to: Nadarajah.Sriskandarajah@sol.slu.se or arjenwals@gmail.com no later than August 1st of 2008



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  • Indicator is an initiative of the EfS programme at London South Bank University. The EfS programme has some 12 years experience in debating and delivering EfS across the global regions.

    This online journal provides a forum for programme students, alumni and others to publish material that does not fit within the usual formal, 'stuffy' criteria that academic publications generally require. It is freely accessible and downloadable content will be archived to build a valuable resource over time.

  • Indicator is hosted on servers using 100% of their electricity from certified green renewable energy sources.

  • The word 'indicator' has a number of different meanings. Indeed, it has a particular use in the fields of environment and sustainability to refer to biophysical or statistical measures that can be used to gauge the health of a system or a progression to achieving a certain goal. However, the particular meaning that we would like to evoke with this e-journal is that of

    a person or thing that signals an intended change of direction

    Whether you believe achieving the goals of sustainability are going to require a change to the core of our being, a paradigm shift, a change in our worldview or the way we look at our place in relation to the world we live in, or more directly, just a change in the way we do things without any fundamental shift in our thinking; or some of all of the above – this e-journal is a medium for signalling the change.

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