4.6 Article

Field Environmental Philosophy: A Biocultural Ethic Approach to Education and Ecotourism for Sustainability

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13084526

Keywords

biocultural conservation; biodiversity; Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve; Chile; ethics; metaphors; tourism

Funding

  1. Institute of Ecology and Biodiversity grant [ANID-AFB170008]
  2. IRES-National Science Foundation - University of North Texas [NSF 1658651]

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Field Environmental Philosophy (FEP) is an educational methodology that aims to reconnect citizens and nature by using a systemic approach of biocultural ethic. By combining tourism with experiential education, FEP seeks to reorient ecotourism practices towards biocultural conservation, integrating social, economic, and environmental dimensions of sustainability. FEP has the potential to broaden both understanding and practices of environmental education and sustainable tourism by incorporating a philosophical foundation, and its methodology is being adapted in various world regions for integrating education and ecotourism for sustainability.
To contribute to achieving local and global sustainability, we propose a novel educational methodology, called field environmental philosophy (FEP), which orients ecotourism practices to reconnect citizens and nature. FEP is based on the systemic approach of the biocultural ethic that values the vital links among the life habits of co-inhabitants (humans and other-than-humans) who share a common habitat. Based on this 3Hs model (habitats, co-inhabitants, habits), FEP combines tourism with experiential education to reorient biocultural homogenization toward biocultural conservation. FEP's methodological approach seeks to integrate social, economic, and environmental dimensions of sustainability by generating new links between biological and cultural diversity at different spatial and social scales. Ecotourism has an underutilized potential to link sciences with education and conservation practices at different scales. By incorporating a philosophical foundation, FEP broadens both understanding and practices of environmental education and sustainable tourism. FEP has been developed at the Omora Ethnobotanical Park in the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve, Chile, at the southern end of the Americas since 2000, where it has oriented transdisciplinary work for the creation of new protected areas and ecotourism practices. FEP enables an integration of biophysical, cultural, and institutional dimensions into the design of ecotourism activities that transform and broaden the perceptions of tourists, local guides, students, and other participants to better appreciate local biological and cultural diversity. FEP's methodology is starting to be adapted in other world regions, such as Germany, Japan, and Mexico, to integrate education and ecotourism for sustainability.

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