The Human Relationship with Nature: Development and Culture
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About this book
Winner of Outstanding Book Award 2000 Moral Development and Education American Educational Research Association. Winner of the 2000 Book Award from the Moral Development & Education Group of the American Educational Research Association Urgent environmental problems call for vigorous research and theory on how humans develop a relationship with nature. In a series of original research projects Peter Kahn answers this call. For the past eight years Kahn has studied children young adults and parents in diverse geographical locations ranging from an economically impoverished black community in Houston to a remote village in the Brazilian Amazon. In these studies Kahn seeks answers to the following questions: How do people value nature and how do they reason morally about environmental degradation? Do children have a deep connection to the natural world that gets severed by modern society? Or do such connections emerge if at all later in life with increased cognitive and moral maturity? How does culture affect environmental commitments and sensibilities? Are there universal features in the human relationship with nature? Kahns empirical and theoretical findings draw on current work in psychology biology environmental behavior education policy and moral development. This scholarly yet accessible book will be of value to practitioners in the social science and environmental fields as well as to informed generalists interested in environmental issues and children.
