Alison Neilson
Having worked in government wildlife policy departments as well as an informal and adult educator, I bring embodied and creative methods for environmental justice to my practice. Currently my prime research site is with artisanal fishers in the Azores Islands, Portugal, so I dance between policy analysis and disrupting knowledge regimes which work against the cultural and environmental sustainability of these communities. Following the lead of these same communities, I look toward the powerful methods of tricksters to subvert the power hierarchies that support the neoliberal academy.
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Papers by Alison Neilson
We are a collaborative council of animals. Our keynote address is theory in practice. Ubuntu: I am because we are.
Alison Laurie Neilson (Coimbra, Portugal)
Chamuel (Innsbruck, Austria)
Diana Visintini (Puerto Madryn, Argentina)
Eimear O’Neill (Toronto, Canada)
Garry Enns (Boissevain, Canada)
Judite Fernandes (Lisbon, Portugal)
Leesee Papatsie (Iqaluit, Canada)
Maria Paula Meneses (Coimbra, Portugal and Maputo, Mozambique)
Miye Nadya Tom (Los Angelas, USA)
Níels Einarsson (Akureyri, Iceland)
Reingard (Rana) Spannring (Innsbruck, Austria)
Rita São Marcos (Coimbra, Portugal)
We are animals, we are spirit.
We are activists, educators, and researchers:
Centre for Social Sciences Aquino de Bragança
Stefansson Arctic Institute
University of the Arctic
University of Coimbra – Centre for Social Studies
University of Innsbruck
University of Toronto – Transformative Learning Centre
International Peace Garden
One Earth Community
The World March of Women
Canadian Network for Environmental Education and Communication
Cultural Cooperative “Barefeet”
Feeding My Family
Mennonite Literary Society
RCE Açores
Seventh Native American Generation Magazine
We are a collaborative council of animals. Our keynote address is theory in practice. Ubuntu: I am because we are.
Alison Laurie Neilson (Coimbra, Portugal)
Chamuel (Innsbruck, Austria)
Diana Visintini (Puerto Madryn, Argentina)
Eimear O’Neill (Toronto, Canada)
Garry Enns (Boissevain, Canada)
Judite Fernandes (Lisbon, Portugal)
Leesee Papatsie (Iqaluit, Canada)
Maria Paula Meneses (Coimbra, Portugal and Maputo, Mozambique)
Miye Nadya Tom (Los Angelas, USA)
Níels Einarsson (Akureyri, Iceland)
Reingard (Rana) Spannring (Innsbruck, Austria)
Rita São Marcos (Coimbra, Portugal)
We are animals, we are spirit.
We are activists, educators, and researchers:
Centre for Social Sciences Aquino de Bragança
Stefansson Arctic Institute
University of the Arctic
University of Coimbra – Centre for Social Studies
University of Innsbruck
University of Toronto – Transformative Learning Centre
International Peace Garden
One Earth Community
The World March of Women
Canadian Network for Environmental Education and Communication
Cultural Cooperative “Barefeet”
Feeding My Family
Mennonite Literary Society
RCE Açores
Seventh Native American Generation Magazine
AERA Conference, Montreal, April 11-15, 2005
A Zine about our Practice
Alison Neilson and Andrea Inocêncio
Gothic pedagogy
Glenn-Egil Torgersen, Herner Saeverot, Kristian Firing
This chapter is an invitation to join the authors on a journey to an island in the Atlantic Ocean to consider that which seems normal and abnormal within your place as well. Three teacher educators from different places invite the reader to reflect on what it would mean to take spirituality seriously within learning for sustainability. Successfully meeting complex challenges and uncertain futures requires the full breadth of human understandings: spirituality has too long been pushed aside. A workshop about biodiversity for educators in the Azores islands, Portugal led us to explore our own narratives of educational experiences and heightened our motivation to listen to and support diverse ways of knowing. The inclusion of a local spiritual leader as a speaker in the opening of the workshop sparked a strong reaction: an opportunity for important reflexive practice and transformational education that can honour the diverse spiritual understandings that learners carry with them. The conversation presented here questions the official narratives of secularism in school systems and the unintended consequences of teaching from a place of unexplored assumptions about our own spiritual beliefs and how this may affect others in the classroom. Educators are asked to consider what inspires (“spirits”) their practice and how this reflexion may bring more vitality to education for sustainability."
Alison Laurie Neilson, Andrea Inocêncio, Rita São Marcos, Rodrigo Lacerda, Maria Simões, Simone Longo de Andrade, Rigel Lazo Cantú, Nayla Naoufal, Maja Maksimovic and Margarida Augusto
E-book available as open access
https://www.riverpublishers.com/book_details.php?book_id=476