LEADER 11566nam 22005533 450 001 9910877770503321 005 20240220080208.0 010 $a9781394275793 010 $a139427579X 010 $a9781394275779 010 $a1394275773 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC31167443 035 $a(Au-PeEL)EBL31167443 035 $a(CKB)30404826600041 035 $a(Exl-AI)31167443 035 $a(EXLCZ)9930404826600041 100 $a20240220d2024 uy 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcnu|||||||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 10$aBiosphere Reserves and Sustainable Development Goals 1 $eScientific and Practical Educational Issues in the Mediterranean 205 $a1st ed. 210 1$aNewark :$cJohn Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,$d2024. 210 4$dİ2024. 215 $a1 online resource (255 pages) 311 08$a9781786307804 311 08$a1786307804 327 $aCover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Presentation of the Authors of the Two Volumes -- Introduction -- Part 1. Biosphere Reserves and Sustainable Development Goals: Multidisciplinary Scientific Issues -- Introduction to Part 1 -- Chapter 1. Man and the Biosphere: A Precursory Program for the Next World -- 1.1. 1971-2021, the beginnings of sustainable development -- 1.2. Making sure no one is left behind -- 1.3. Identification of gaps, risks and challenges -- 1.4. Valuable lessons learned from the transformation towards sustainable and resilient societies -- 1.5. Investments that may affect the building of sustainable and resilient societies -- 1.6. Integration of biodiversity within sustainable development policies -- 1.7. Policy recommendations to accelerate progress in building sustainable and resilient societies -- 1.8. Lessons learned from the Covid-19 crisis and perspectives for biosphere reserves for the next world -- 1.9. References -- Chapter 2. Humans and Nature: A Story to be Rewritten -- 2.1. Homo sapiens, a species like the others -- 2.2. Homo sapiens, a nature modifier -- 2.3. The Mediterranean, more than a sea in the middle of the land -- 2.4. The academic sphere and the action in favor of biodiversity -- 2.5. Biosphere reserves and Sustainable Development Goals -- 2.6. References -- Chapter 3. Social Representations, Collective Organization and Mediterranean Biosphere Reserves -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Social representations as an exploratory method of prior knowledge -- 3.3. How can social representations be defined? Some theoretical elements -- 3.4. How can social representations be defined? Central core and peripheral elements -- 3.5. The methodological elements of our study -- 3.6. Study results -- 3.7. Differences and similarities in the social representations of students. 327 $a3.7.1. Social representations relatively shared by students enrolled in France and in Spain -- 3.7.2. Notably different results for the students enrolled in Morocco -- 3.8. Addressing the issue of complexity versus focusing on the environment -- 3.9. Addressing the collective organization of society versus the recourse to individual action -- 3.10. Conclusion -- 3.11. References -- Chapter 4. Challenges and Opportunities of Collaborative Research on Biosphere Reserves in the Mediterranean -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Collaborative research -- 4.3. Beneficial aspects of collaborative research -- 4.4. Challenges to collaborative research and data sharing -- 4.5. Motives behind collaborative research -- 4.5.1. Components of collaborative research -- 4.5.2. External components -- 4.5.3. Internal components -- 4.6. The Mediterranean Basin: asymmetries between Northern and Southern Mediterranean countries -- 4.6.1. Economic development -- 4.6.2. Human and social development -- 4.6.3. Trade and economic integration -- 4.6.4. Scientific contributions and representation -- 4.6.5. Impediments to collaboration across the Mediterranean -- 4.6.6. Regionalism and conflict -- 4.6.7. Academic boycotts -- 4.7. Travel limitations -- 4.7.1. Language barriers -- 4.7.2. Institutional structures promoting collaborative research in the Mediterranean -- 4.8. Conclusion -- 4.9. References -- Chapter 5. Scientific Tourism in Multi-Labeled Protected Areas: The Ecological Transition and Controversy in the Mountains -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. The ecological transition: from the injunctions to the different socio-political and cultural references -- 5.3. The trajectories of governance forms for a scientific tourism project -- 5.4. The ambiguities related to the touristic development of scientific culture -- 5.5. The environmental paradoxes of a scientific tourism project. 327 $a5.6. Conclusion -- 5.7. References -- Part 2. Educational Practices Relating to Biosphere Reserves: Balance and Prospects -- Introduction to Part 2 -- Chapter 6. Teaching How to Produce Differently at a Biosphere Reserve -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Curricular challenges of teaching how to "produce differently" -- 6.2.1. Curriculum development model -- 6.2.2. Distinction between agroecology/agro-ecology: the question of the reference materials -- 6.3. Technical knowledge and political movements -- 6.4. Knowledge conflicts and conflicts of values: the question of direction in the circulation of knowledge -- 6.5. Towards coherent criteria for analyzing agroecological literacy -- 6.5.1. Essential curriculum elements -- 6.5.2. A practical method for measuring necessary curricular links -- 6.6. Case study -- 6.6.1. Biosphere reserves, levers to "produce differently"? -- 6.6.2. The Mont Ventoux biosphere reserve and the agricultural school of Carpentras -- 6.6.3. Case study results -- 6.7. Discussion -- 6.7.1. What curricular coherence should exist for teaching to "produce differently" in the biosphere reserve? -- 6.7.2. The teacher's posture in relation to agroecology -- 6.7.3. The role of the territory in the implementation of a consistent curriculum -- 6.8. Conclusion -- 6.9. References -- Chapter 7. The Sustainable Management of Biosphere Reserves: What Are the Challenges for Agricultural Education? -- 7.1. Introduction -- 7.2. Agroecology, from its emergence to the change of agricultural model -- 7.2.1. Agroecology: an ever-evolving, polysemous concept -- 7.2.2. Agroecology for a real change in the agricultural model? -- 7.3. Social representations -- 7.3.1. The theoretical framework of social representations -- 7.3.2. The structural approach to social representations -- 7.4. Methodology -- 7.4.1. Data collection -- 7.4.2. Populations. 327 $a7.5. Data categorization -- 7.6. Results -- 7.7. Discussion -- 7.8. Conclusion -- 7.9. References -- Chapter 8. Collective Skills from Partnerships Between Protected Areas and Teachers -- 8.1. Introduction -- 8.2. The educational partnership -- 8.2.1. Partnerships in national education -- 8.2.2. A partnership for creating collective professional skills? -- 8.3. Three case studies in a labeled rural territory -- 8.3.1. Descriptions of the projects undertaken in the three case studies -- 8.3.2. Data collection methods -- 8.3.3. Results -- 8.4. Presence of a collective skill and of the collective's skill -- 8.4.1. Case A in school one -- 8.4.2. Case A in school two -- 8.4.3. Case A in school three -- 8.4.4. Case B -- 8.4.5. Case C -- 8.4.6. Synthesis -- 8.5. Conclusion -- 8.6. Appendix -- 8.7. References -- Chapter 9. The Instrumentalization of Education in Sustainable Development at the Service of Tourism: The Case of the Arganeraie -- 9.1. Introduction -- 9.2. Environmental crisis and inflation of alternative tourism -- 9.3. Tourism and sustainable development -- 9.4. Sustainable tourism and patrimony: educational issues -- 9.5. Towards a "sustainable strategy" -- 9.6. The Moroccan situation: a sustainable tourism policy in the ABR? -- 9.7. A cultural as well as a natural patrimony item: the argan tree -- 9.8. Between reality and opportunism: the instrumentalization of sustainable development -- 9.9. Education: the missing vector for sustainable tourism -- 9.10. Conclusion -- 9.11. References -- Chapter 10. Biosphere Reserves and Political Skills Transfer in University Curricula -- 10.1. Introduction -- 10.2. Towards a conceptual recontextualization of the political skill in the environmental field -- 10.2.1. Learning eco-literacy and building the disposition towards cognitive socialization in academic disciplines. 327 $a10.2.2. Learning eco-citizenship and building the disposition towards political socialization -- 10.2.3. Learning environmental deliberation and building the disposition towards critical cognitive socialization -- 10.2.4. Learning in collective action regimes and building the disposition towards democratic socialization -- 10.3. Environmental political skill: Master's degree in Man and the Biosphere - case study -- 10.3.1. The MAB Programme, political skill and formal curriculum -- 10.3.2. Methodology -- 10.4. Results and discussion -- 10.4.1. What political skill in the formal curriculum of the MAB master's degree? -- 10.4.2. What disciplinary contributions to the environmental political skill in the formal curriculum of the MAB master's degree? -- 10.5. Conclusion: changing curricular morphologies -- 10.6. References -- Chapter 11. Education and Mediation in the Arganeraie: Alliance Strategies Between Education and Tourism Actors? -- 11.1. Introduction -- 11.2. Locating the Arganeraie biosphere reserve -- 11.3. The ABR, a tourist landscape showcased by the media? -- 11.4. ABR landscape imaging and its dissemination -- 11.5. A confusion between education forms in the ABR: formal, non-formal and informal -- 11.6. Towards mediation in the ABR or the construction of an alliance and communication strategies between education and tourism actors -- 11.7. The territorial integration of the ABR - a condition for the alliance's success: communication, mediation and media coverage -- 11.8. "Polarized" networks in the ABR: a tool for the alliance between education and tourism actors -- 11.9. Actor training for the development of capacities: skills and capability for communication management -- 11.10. Conclusion -- 11.11. References -- List of Authors -- Index -- Summary of Volume 2 -- EULA. 330 $aThis book, edited by Angela Barthes, Catherine Cibien, and Bruno Romagny, explores the intersection of biosphere reserves and sustainable development goals, focusing on scientific and practical educational issues in the Mediterranean region. It examines the historical context of sustainable development from 1971 to 2021, addressing challenges and opportunities for building resilient societies. The book highlights the role of biosphere reserves in promoting biodiversity and sustainable policies, emphasizing the importance of collaborative research and policy recommendations for future progress. It is intended for academics, researchers, and policymakers interested in environmental science, sustainable development, and regional studies.$7Generated by AI. 606 $aBiosphere reserves$7Generated by AI 606 $aSustainable development$7Generated by AI 615 0$aBiosphere reserves 615 0$aSustainable development 700 $aBarthes$b Angela$01287065 701 $aCibien$b Catherine$01752600 701 $aRomagny$b Bruno$01282186 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910877770503321 996 $aBiosphere Reserves and Sustainable Development Goals 1$94187930 997 $aUNINA