Tag Archive for: 10weec

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Discover the panelists at 10WEEC: Robert Brian Shutes

Robert Brian Shutes is Emeritus Professor of Ecotechnology at Middlesex University, London. He was Vice-Chair of the International Water Association (IWA) Specialist Group on ‘The use of Wetlands for Water Pollution Control’ (1996-2008).

He has been a consultant and partner on projects in Asia for the World Bank, Asian Development Bank, European Union, UK and Singapore Government Departments and Agencies, and has organized and presented at workshops, seminars and conferences in Asian countries. He has also been a Visiting-Professor at universities in Asia.

His topic at 10WEEC: “Wetlands for Water Pollution Control: A multi-faceted paradigm for Environmental Education”.

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Ronghuai Huang from Beijing Normal University confirmed as keynote speaker

Ronghuai Huang is a Professor in Faculty of Education of Beijing Normal University (BNU). He has being engaged in the research on smart learning environment, artificial intelligence in education, educational technology as well as knowledge engineering. He received ‘Chang Jiang Scholar’ award in 2016, which is the highest academic award presented to an individual in higher education by the Ministry of Education of China. He serves as Co-Dean of Smart Learning Institute, Director of UNESCO International Rural Educational and Training Centre, and Director of China National Engineering Lab for Cyberlearning Intelligent Technology. He is very active in academic organizations both at home and abroad. He is also Committeeman of the Science Subject Expert Committee of the National Textbook Committee, Vice-chairman of China Educational Technology Association, Deputy Director of Teaching Guidance Committee of Educational Technology at Institutions of Higher Education (MOE), Vice-Chairman of Beijing Education Informatization Expert Committee, and Expert of MOE AI Innovation Panel. During 2013 to 2018, he serves as General Chair for International Conference on Advanced Learning Technology (ICALT). He is also Executive Committeeman of The Global Chinese Society for Computers in Education, Vice President of International Association of Smart Learning Environments (IASLE), and Editor-in-Chief of Springer’s Journal of Smart Learning Environment and Journal of Computers in Education. Till now, he has accomplished and is working on over 100 projects, and his ideas have been widely spread, with about 400 academic papers and over 40 books published at home and aboard.

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An invitation to disseminate your research

The journal Education for the Environment: Regards – Recherches – Réflexions will host the proposals for articles from a paper presented at the World Environmental Education Congress. Recognized as a reference journal by the High Council for the Evaluation of Research and Higher Education (HCERE) in France, it is supported by the Center for Research in Education and Training related to environment and eco-citizenship (Centr’ERE of the University of Quebec in Montreal). It is also supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) and the Fonds de recherche du Québec – Society and Culture (FRQSC).

To submit your article proposal, you need to send the following information in a Word document:

A significant title (maximum of 15 words);
A summary of your article (maximum 250 words) accompanied by three main bibliographical references;
Your name and the name of your institution, research unit or home organization.

The management committee will be aware of the information provided and will ensure that your proposal is consistent with the guidelines of the journal. A notice will be sent to you within three weeks. If you receive a favorable opinion, you will be asked to write your article according to the publication guidelines. Your article will then be evaluated anonymously by three people.
The articles will be posted online in autumn 2020 on the journal’s website

For more information or to submit an article proposal: revue.ere@uqam.ca

FR

La revue Éducation relative à l’environnement : Regards – Recherches – Réflexions accueillera les propositions d’article issues d’une communication présentée dans le cadre du Congrès mondial en éducation relative à l’environnement. Reconnue comme une revue référente par le Haut conseil de l’évaluation de la recherche et de l’enseignement supérieur (HCERE) en France, elle est soutenue par le Centre de recherche en éducation et formation relatives à l’environnement et à l’écocitoyenneté (Centr’ERE de l’Université du Québec à Montréal). Elle a également l’appui du Conseil de recherches en sciences humaines du Canada (CRSH) et du Fonds de recherche du Québec – Société et Culture  (FRQSC).
Pour soumettre votre proposition d’article, il s’agit de nous acheminer les informations suivantes, dans un document Word :

Un titre significatif (maximum de 15 mots);
Un résumé de votre article (maximum 250 mots) accompagné de trois principales références bibliographiques;
Votre nom et le nom votre institution, unité de recherche ou organisation d’attache.

Le comité de direction prendra alors connaissance des informations transmises et s’assurera ainsi que votre proposition cadre avec les lignes directrices de la revue. Un avis vous sera envoyé dans les trois semaines suivantes. Si vous recevez un avis favorable, vous serez invité à rédiger votre article en respectant les directives de publication. Votre article sera alors évalué de façon anonyme par trois personnes.

Les articles reçus seront mis en ligne à l’automne 2020 sur le site de la revue

Pour plus d’information ou pour soumettre une proposition d’article: revue.ere@uqam.ca

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Thai Airways: special discounts for WEEC delegates

Thai Airways International Public Company Limited. is pleased to serve the delegates for the 10th WEEC Congress. The Event code TG1911069 is created to use as the password  to get access to MICE booking page. The special fares for 10th WEEC Congress will be found once you book your flights.

We look forward to meeting you in Bangkok and hope you have a safe and peaceful journey. Register yourself here

 

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Gunter Pauli: innovation and entrepreneurship at the WEEC

Vsiting lecturer and professor at universities in all continents, Member of the Board of NGOs and private companies in Asia, USA and Latin America Gunter Pauli is once again key note speaker at WEEC.

Actually Gunter Pauli already attended the 7WEEC in Morocco (2013) and it was delightful to attend his lesson. Now, for the 10th edition of the World Environmental Education Congress in Bangkok (Thailand) Gunter Pauli will be again in the number of our esteemed guests.

He has advised governments, entrepreneurs and industry leaders on how to implement breakthrough innovations that permits society to better respond to the basic needs of all, starting with water, food, housing, health and energy. He works with what is locally available, focuses on the generation of value.

He founded the “Zero Emissions Research and Initiatives” (ZERI) at the United Nations University in Tokyo, and subsequently established The Global ZERI Network as a foundation, redesigning production and consumption into clusters of industries inspired by natural systems.

He is dedicated to design and implement a society and industries, which respond to people’s needs using what is locally available. His visionary approach supported by dozens of projects on the ground landed him an invitation to present his cases at the World Expo 2000 in Germany. There he constructed the largest bamboo pavilion in modern days presenting 7 breakthrough initiatives.

Gunter wishes to inspire children to become entrepreneurs, responding to the basic needs of all with what is locally available. As an entrepreneur he created several  companies and his book THE BLUE ECONOMY describes the businesses of the future. Gunter has an MBA, is professor at several universities, and he is father of 5 children.

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Samira Benabdallah confirmed as keynote speaker at 10WEEC

Samira Benabdallah (in the picture) biologist (microbiologist) for 20 years in the field of the water environment, is the Director of the Center for Environmental Education (CEE) of the Mohammed VI Foundation for the Protection of the Environmentof (Morocco). Her goal is the protection and preservation of water quality. At the same time, she works extensively in the field of environmental protection at the Mohammed VI Foundation for the Protection of the Environment chaired by Her Royal Highness Princess Lalla Hasnaa.

The mission of the Foundation is the promotion of the protection of the environment and the improvement of the living environment. Through its approach, the Foundation raises awareness and educates all publics, and in particular the youngest, to sustainable development with the development of tools and educational resources needed, it mobilizes actors at different scales of intervention (territorial, regional, national and international), federates and networks the actors at the level of the territories of intervention and at the national level and finally forms and reinforces the capacities of the actors and the tools of sustainable management of the territories.

Today, after 18 years of its existence, the acquisition of important knowledge and know-how through the establishment of more than 20 innovative programs at the national level the Mohammed VI Foundation for the Protection of the Environment has set up a center for environmental education (CEE), space dedicated to awareness, education, training all to sustainable development.
The Environmental Water Center’s ambition is to reinforce the transversal understanding of the issues related to environmental protection and sustainable development through capacity building, to create a network of excellence bringing together Moroccan and international leaders and to develop training content. of quality answering the existing problems and needs expressed.

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Find out religions and cultures in Thailand… waiting the Congress

Our approach to the WEEC Congress in Bangkok continues with a taste of one of the main components of Thai culture and tradition: religion, or – better to say – the various forms of religious belief. There is a composite reality. Even if more than 90 percent declare themselves “Buddhist Theravada“, there are still residues of the previous cults in the various regions that make up the State which, with the Thais of the Muslim and Catholic religion (just over 6 per cent) go to compose a reality that often mixes religious and civil practices.

The “Theravada tradition” is a form of Buddhism that has its origins in the island of Sri Lanka and is also present in India, Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia and in some southern parts of China and in southern Viet Nam.
In this variant of Buddhism  is central the figure of the monks, called shanga, present mainly in and near the “vat“, their temples-monastery. They are recognizable by their yellow or orange saris and by their very short hair, sometimes with a completely shaved head. They cannot have beards (and hair) of any kind and their life is marked by times and rituals typical of a religion closely linked to the environment, to the cycles of the stars, the moon, the sun and, above all to agriculture and to the breeding. The shanga enjoy special attention from the faithful and continually receive gifts (especially food, clothes, amulets) that are part of what is “offered” in the vat to the Buddha and his dignitaries. Gifts that are part of classical Buddhist rituals, given that on the basis of them one will be judged at the time of the “passage” (a better life). This type of Buddhism contemplates the “reincarnation” of the soul either in another body or in beings considered inferior (from monkeys down to snakes and scorpions). It is a particularly felt presence in the countryside, less visible in the cities, even though Bangkok alone has 120 vats scattered in various districts.

The periods of phansa that young people face for about three months are still fairly respected, even if not as in the past, refining in this way the methods of meditation and the “personal purification“, precisely the phansa. The prevailing Thai religion (the “Theravada”) has incorporated the beliefs, habits and practices of previous religions (including those ancestral choruses that date back thousands of years). He drew heavily on the Hindu religious universe and reached a particular synthesis. An example of this syncretism lies precisely in the theory of metempsychosis as in the high number of local deities or in the tendency to mix religion and state management. Even the god Brahma has his vat dedicated to him, near the central Erawan Hotel in Bangkok.
Another characteristic of “Thai” Buddhism is that of fragmentation in hundreds of variants: from the more formal and orthodox to those that connect parts of the Gospel to the Buddhist creed or – even – of the Koran, thus creating a bridge – in fact – with Christianity and with the most visionary Islam. Other practitioners draw their religious inspiration from the figure of Buddhadasa Bhikku (1906 – 1993), a Buddhist monk who has based his social action on helping the poorest and overcoming ideological and religious fences. And, in this case, their form of “theravada” finds a particular declination in the adjective “bhikku”.

The Islamic community (about 4 percent of the entire population) is concentrated in the peninsular and coastal area of ​​the south. The group of Christians, both Catholic and Protestant, do not exceed one percent overall, is concentrated in the cities or areas of particular commercial activity. The Christian schools (Protestant or Catholic) with thousands of students very often of Buddhist or Muslim families are highly quoted. And these are found almost everywhere, well seen by the state and local communities.

The dominant religious form, that of the “theravada” variant of Buddhism, allows the royal family to be “the representation of equilibrium (defined “kharma”) between heaven and earth, between men and animals and which provides a “dharma” ( a form of “political actualization”) direct emanation of the sovereign, with consequent prescriptions and instructions on work, family, social organization. Clear traces of multiple overlaps and intersections are found in the complex rituality linked to the “passage” ceremonies.
Those of puberty and the accompanying of the deceased in the “transit” towards another life are fundamental.
Finally, marriage ceremonies are very complex and varied and follow canons and “kinship systems” codified over the centuries. In the latter case it is essential to strengthen the tribe / group of origin by broadening contacts with neighboring realities and there is nothing better than the celebration of one or more marriages, usually combined. Often, for example, brothers of a tribe get married with sisters from another tribe or widows are acquired, since polygamy is not a punishable offense. Or you get to “marriages of alliance” with the stipulation of a treaty of friendship between two realities that are more or less distant.

With Hinduism there are many similarities not only in terminology (kharma and dharma) but, above all, in the clear distinction of social functions, distinct by gender, wealth and tribal belonging, “fences” comparable to those existing in the Indian society based on castes. A modality, in the long run, no longer bearable and confined to the minority of Indian origin or of the former Burma, now Myanmar.

Thai fishermen, in view of the special attention paid to the “Theravada” Buddhism environment, often thank the gods for exceptional catches and never miss a “small altar” of ancestors on boats. Another sign of how strong the spiritualism of origin remained. Many fountains, waterfalls, forests and mountains are considered sacred and inhabited by characters of Buddhist religious mythology (mixed with gods and goddesses of the Hindu pantheon) or, even, with names that refer to the prehistoric populations who lived in these areas in periods prior to the invasions thai.

Above all a spirituality tending to purification and personal improvement before the public commitment. A further confirmation of the multiformity and sensitivity of the Thai people.

Pierluigi Cavalchini

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Attend to the NGO’s Forum at 10WEEC

You will be able to learn more about the latest in environmental education and education for sustainable development and discuss different issues. Participating in the NGO Forum gives you a chance to get valuable feedback that can further improve your work, establish new connections, as well as attract potential donors.

How to participate?

The NGO – Forum is an area where you can set up an information stand during the whole congress or give a mini lecture on your organisation and your work. The participation in the NGO – Forum is free of charge; but representatives have to register through the website and pay the registration fee as a congress delegate.

Date & Venue

The 10th edition of WEEC will take place from November 3 to 7 2019 in Bangkok, Thailand. The venue for the NGO Forum is BITEC, the Bangkok International Trade and Exhibition Center.

Contact

For further enquiries and registrations, please contact the Local Organizing Committee 10thweec@gmail.com

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Former Minister of Education in Bhutan, Lyonpo Thakur S Powdyel, at 10WEEC

The WEEC Permanent Secretariat is proud to announce that Mr. Lyonpo Thakur S Powdyel (former Minister of Education in Bhutan) will be a key note speaker at 10th WEEC (Bangkok, Thailand, 3-7 November 2019)

Lyonpo Thakur is the founder and great supporter of the concept of Green Schools in Bhutan. He wrote a book called “My Green School”. He calls it a meditation on the core function of education. In “My Green School” he develops eight elements that are the vital claims that education systems and educators must affirm and advance to make teaching and learning more purposeful and integral. There are some fine examples or models of Green Schools in Bhutan, which Lyonpo Thakur can refer to.
Thakur S Powdyel was awarded the prestigious International Gusi Peace Prize in 2011 for Life-time Contribution to Education, and the Global Education Award in 2012 for Outstanding Contribution to Education. He has experience in speaking at many international meetings and conferences.
We hope you can find his speech very motivating and inspiring. We look forward to seeing you soon at 10th WEEC!

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Discover Thailand nature with the 10th WEEC

The Thai laws of 2002 and 2006 for the protection of the forest heritage as well as those for the protection of the most valuable areas, have allowed the slowing down of a process of progressive elimination of the forest component. At the beginning of 1900, 70% of the territory of Thailand was covered with forests, with fine mahogany trees, various types of walnut, oak and beech trees, as well as different types of pines. Gradually this natural “green lung” decreased to a skimpy 25% of the total around 2000. Since then there has been a vigorous swerve that led to the current stabilization, with a consolidated “green” presence of around 35% of the territory. Especially with many new areas for special protection or, in some cases, integral.
Particularly noteworthy are the areas of protection of teak and trees belonging to the Dipterocarpaceae, the Lauan, the Meranti, with large productions of resin and excellent wood. There are also giant bamboo forests with rods as high as eight meters and sections of 25 cm in diameter. Even these are duly protected or, as in the case of the Khao Sok (in the picture) reservation, even become an opportunity for revaluation also in terms of tourism and culture. The same applies to the large lotus plots and the three varieties of water lilies present, all well protected and followed by special groups of volunteers and “green policemen”.

The protection of animals, as well as forests has increased

Also the protection of the typical animals of the region has had, since the eighties, a particular attention. There are still areas where the cultivation of rice, cotton, hemp, pineapple, fruit palms is carried out, with traditional systems and, also with the use of buffalo, oxen and – sporadically – elephants with small ears, but – as you can imagine – by now all the crops are correctly mechanized, while maintaining little more than familiar extensions.
The use of these animals (and especially of the elephants) is, today, confined to some very isolated peripheral realities, or within didactic-information centers specialized in the promotion of the “Thai” traditions. A condition of protection that has been made explicit by the 1989 Delegation Law that has definitively freed all elephants registered in the Thai state from all forms of forced labor.
Serious damage to wildlife has been affected by poaching and the capture of particular exotic animals. Although it would be more appropriate to use the present time, since it is one of the most sanctioned crimes since 2000. The most sought-after animals are the tapirs, the rhinos and the elephants themselves. A similar fate has been left to gibbons, Khao monkeys and many types of birds.

This is a continuous struggle between local traffickers (linked to Chinese and Western sorting centers) and the various law enforcement agencies who, we recall, in the case of capturing the perpetrators, do not hesitate to apply very heavy penalties.
Similar conditions also reserved for the many producers of opium poppies, marijuana hemp and other hallucinogenic products (the “Thran” fungus among them).
A packet of hashish ready for use, if seized at the airport at the time of embarkation to leave Thailand, even if it is a few tens of grams, can lead to a minimum detention of three years. Pure fish industry, only partly Thai (mostly in Chinese and Malay), has contributed to the impoverishment and transformation of both marine and river biological variety. There are practically no more shrimps (the traditional “hakifs”) in free circulation conditions, as well as some types of crabs, particularly sought after for tasty meats.
However, since 1991 the centers of “fish culture” have increased with a gradual recovery, in special basins, of the traditional local fishery products.
Also the crocodiles and snakes, above all the cobras, the object of spasmodic hunting, although very forbidden, have also decreased. The first for particularly soft and shiny skins, the second for the poison (paid for by the weight of gold by the pharmaceutical industry) and for the variously spotted fleece.
Even the silk industry, for almost two hundred years the prerogative of the Chinese community, has been “recovered” thanks to government incentives that are making the Thai territory the third largest world producer of natural silk, that is the one that uses the worm in all its phases.
We are waiting for you in Thailand, at 10WEEC.

Pierluigi Cavalchini