Skip to main content

LUP Student Papers

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

A hidden (re)connection is stronger than an obvious one : ‘the arts’ of channeling social learning in Southern marginalized communities

Fountain, Parren Douglas LU (2020) In Master Thesis Series in Environmental Studies and Sustainability Science MESM02 20202
LUCSUS (Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies)
Abstract
Marginalized communities in Southern contexts are among those most vulnerable to the effects of our drastically changing climate and environmental systems. Therefore, pathways leading to the transformation of our unsustainable systems, structures, and behaviors affecting these communities must be explored. To achieve transformation, some researchers argue that social learning is one such pathway. Emerging research at the nexus of art and sustainability science suggests that artistic methods may possess social learning capacities that may transform the unsustainable systems affecting marginalized communities in these contexts.

This thesis will explore how art can play a role in social learning processes for Southern marginalized... (More)
Marginalized communities in Southern contexts are among those most vulnerable to the effects of our drastically changing climate and environmental systems. Therefore, pathways leading to the transformation of our unsustainable systems, structures, and behaviors affecting these communities must be explored. To achieve transformation, some researchers argue that social learning is one such pathway. Emerging research at the nexus of art and sustainability science suggests that artistic methods may possess social learning capacities that may transform the unsustainable systems affecting marginalized communities in these contexts.

This thesis will explore how art can play a role in social learning processes for Southern marginalized communities. To gain a better understanding of the potential of the arts in this context, four artistic projects based in Pakistan, Morocco, Peru, and Ecuador were selected for this study. A grounded theory approach was employed to analyze qualitative data collected from in-depth artist interviews, associated project documentation, artistic works, and multimedia content.

Results from the data analysis indicated that the artists have (1) highly nuanced problem framings which link urbanization, development, normative aspects, and lack of human-nature connections to drivers of social-ecological challenges in the respective contexts; (2) the artist projects and the artistic methods used, facilitated a variety of social-ecological interactions and/or connected broader audiences to social-ecological challenges of the marginalized groups; and (3) 3 out of 4 artists claimed that the projects empowered the marginalized groups in the respective contexts.

The artist projects revealed that they facilitated processes of social learning through their nuanced and contextually relevant framings that addressed the complexity of social and environmental challenges present in the various Southern contexts. Furthermore, the analysis suggested that certain artistic methods were more conducive to facilitating social learning processes than others. Despite climate and environmental change uncertainties in Southern contexts, the four cases provided examples of potential sustainability applications of artistic methods for addressing present and future sustainability challenges. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Fountain, Parren Douglas LU
supervisor
organization
course
MESM02 20202
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
art & sustainability science, marginalized communities, social learning, environmental change, transformations, framing
publication/series
Master Thesis Series in Environmental Studies and Sustainability Science
report number
2020:047
language
English
id
9031000
date added to LUP
2020-10-20 08:26:22
date last changed
2020-10-20 08:26:22
@misc{9031000,
  abstract     = {{Marginalized communities in Southern contexts are among those most vulnerable to the effects of our drastically changing climate and environmental systems. Therefore, pathways leading to the transformation of our unsustainable systems, structures, and behaviors affecting these communities must be explored. To achieve transformation, some researchers argue that social learning is one such pathway. Emerging research at the nexus of art and sustainability science suggests that artistic methods may possess social learning capacities that may transform the unsustainable systems affecting marginalized communities in these contexts. 

This thesis will explore how art can play a role in social learning processes for Southern marginalized communities. To gain a better understanding of the potential of the arts in this context, four artistic projects based in Pakistan, Morocco, Peru, and Ecuador were selected for this study. A grounded theory approach was employed to analyze qualitative data collected from in-depth artist interviews, associated project documentation, artistic works, and multimedia content.

Results from the data analysis indicated that the artists have (1) highly nuanced problem framings which link urbanization, development, normative aspects, and lack of human-nature connections to drivers of social-ecological challenges in the respective contexts; (2) the artist projects and the artistic methods used, facilitated a variety of social-ecological interactions and/or connected broader audiences to social-ecological challenges of the marginalized groups; and (3) 3 out of 4 artists claimed that the projects empowered the marginalized groups in the respective contexts.

The artist projects revealed that they facilitated processes of social learning through their nuanced and contextually relevant framings that addressed the complexity of social and environmental challenges present in the various Southern contexts. Furthermore, the analysis suggested that certain artistic methods were more conducive to facilitating social learning processes than others. Despite climate and environmental change uncertainties in Southern contexts, the four cases provided examples of potential sustainability applications of artistic methods for addressing present and future sustainability challenges.}},
  author       = {{Fountain, Parren Douglas}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  series       = {{Master Thesis Series in Environmental Studies and Sustainability Science}},
  title        = {{A hidden (re)connection is stronger than an obvious one : ‘the arts’ of channeling social learning in Southern marginalized communities}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}