ABSTRACT

Educating for Sustainable Development (ESD) approaches are holistic and interdisciplinary, values-driven, participatory, multi-method, locally relevant and emphasize critical thinking and problem-solving. This book explains how ESD approaches work in the Japanese context; their effects on different stakeholders; and their ultimate potential contribution to society in Japan. It considers ESD in both formal and informal education sectors, recognizing that even when classroom learning takes place it must be place-based and predicated on a specific community context. The book explores not only ‘Why ESD’, but why and how ESD in Japan has gained importance in the past decade and more recently in the wake of the triple disaster of March 2011. It considers how ESD can help Japan recover and adapt to disasters and take initiative in building more resilient and sustainable communities.

This volume asks the questions: What are some examples of positive contributions by ESD to sustainability in Japan? What is the role of ESD in Japan in activating people to demand and work towards change? How can schools, universities and non-governmental organizations link with communities to strengthen civic awareness and community action? After an introduction that elucidates the roots and recent promotion of ESD in Japan, part one of this volume looks at the formal education sector in Japan, while part two examines community-based education and sustainability initiatives. The latter revisits the Tohoku region five years on from the events of March 2011, to explore recovery and revitalization efforts by schools, NGOs and residents.

This is an invaluable book for postgraduate students, researchers, teachers and policy makers working on ESD.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

Top-down and bottom-up ESD – divergence and convergence of Japanese ESD discourses and practices

part I|118 pages

School-based approaches

chapter 1|10 pages

Formal ESD in Japan

Dissolving walls between classroom and community

chapter 4|17 pages

Globalising school education in Japan

An investigation using the academic ability model

chapter 7|24 pages

Collaborating for change

Teaching and assessing a university community sustainability course in Japan and Vietnam

part II|132 pages

Community-based approaches

chapter 8|12 pages

Community-based, non-formal and informal ESD in Japan

Where top-down and bottom-up approaches meet

chapter 9|14 pages

Can civil society revitalise dying rural villages?

The case of Kamiseya in Kyoto prefecture

chapter 11|17 pages

From challenge to opportunity

Japanese non-profit organisations harness post-3.11 civic engagement

chapter 12|15 pages

A radical approach from the periphery

Informal ESD through rights recovery for indigenous Ainu

chapter 13|13 pages

The Tohoku Green Renaissance Project

Networking green rebuilding activities after a mega-disaster

chapter 16|11 pages

Postscript

Reflections on visions of rebuilding Tohoku and the future of ESD as a response to risk in Japan