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Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Lessons from the Australian Landcare Movement (Woodhill)

From 'Sustainability, Social Learning and the Democratic Imperative: Lessons from the Australian Landcare Movement' (Woodhill, 2002, in Blackmore, 2010, ch. 4):

  • “Local level community action with an emphasis on stakeholder participation and empowerment” (Woodhill, 2002, in Blackmore, 2010, p. 58).
  • “Deeper structural causes” (Woodhill, 2002, in Blackmore, 2010, p. 58).
  • From the “technocentric” to a progressive-but-limited “localism” “era” on to “institutionalist” era, engaging with “meso- and macro-scales” (Woodhill, 2002, in Blackmore, 2010, p. 59).
  • “Risk society”; modernised society has become reflexive, a manufactured environment of its “own internal risks” (Woodhill, 2002, in Blackmore, 2010, pp. 59-), leading to a “democratic imperative” for radical, participatory, localised democracy (not satisfied by existing ideologies) [?] ...  (cf. Woodhill, 2002, in Blackmore, 2010, pp. 60-61).
  • Social learning: local, community participation building to wider involvement;


(Woodhill, 2002, in Blackmore, 2010, p. 62).


(cf. Woodhill, 2002, in Blackmore, 2010, pp. 63-64).

  • The "dangerous" idea of the ultimacy of the "fate of the market" (Woodhill, 2002, in Blackmore, 2010, p. 63).
Elements of a paradigm of social learning;
  1. Philosophical reflection
  2. Methodological pluralism
  3. Institutional design and social practices
(Woodhill, 2002, in Blackmore, 2010, pp. 64-).

Eight principles for facilitating institutional design;
  1. Self-organisation
  2. Cultivation of Social Capital
  3. Facilitated Coordination
  4. Institutional Diversity
  5. Local – Global Dialectics
  6. Multi-layered Democratic Participation
  7. Autonomous and Integrative Knowledge Systems
  8. Meta-Reflexiveness
(Woodhill, 2002, in Blackmore, 2010, pp. 67-).

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