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What is Relational Justice (see Also Visceral Responsibility)

Teaching and Learning Practices That Promote Sustainable Development and Active Citizenship
Healing and transforming our patterns of relating. Relational justice includes learning to form genuine relationships without idealizations or negative and instrumentalizing projections. It also includes exploring different possibilities for being and relating that are not grounded on shared meaning, identity or conviction, but that stem from sensing oneself as a part of a wider metabolism (planet/land) and of different collective bodies (group/community). Relational justice also refers to ethical engagements with the difficulties and complexities of forming relations between individuals and groups that assume different positions in the established hierarchies of privilege and power.
Published in Chapter:
Global Citizenship Education and Sustainability Otherwise
Rene Suša (The University of British Columbia, Canada), Vanessa Andreotti (The University of British Columbia, Canada), Sharon Stein (The University of British Columbia, Canada), Cash Ahenakew (The University of British Columbia, Canada), Tereza Čajkova (The University of British Columbia, Canada), Dino Kuperman Siwek (Terra Adentro, Brazil), Camilla Cardoso (Terra Adentro, Brazil), and Ninawa Huni Kui (Federation of the Huni Kui Indigenous People, Brazil)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-4402-0.ch001
Abstract
This chapter presents a selection of theoretical and pedagogical frameworks for global citizenship education (GCE) otherwise of the “Gesturing Towards Decolonial Futures” (GTDF) collective. The authors discuss the challenges of addressing the depth and complexity of existing global challenges, in particular as they relate to the questions of (un)sustainability and inherent systemic violence and injustices of modern societies. They begin by introducing the basic premises that guide the work of the GTDF collective and then proceed to map different (soft, critical, and beyond reform) approaches to GCE. The chapter also introduces the pedagogical metaphors/cartographies of the “House of Modernity,” the “Bus,” and the “In Earth's CARE” pedagogical framework and provides links and references to other pedagogical experiments, developed by the collective.
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