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ID191111
Title ProperClimate change education in the South Pacific
Other Title Informationresilience for whom?
LanguageENG
AuthorTakinana, Anuantaeka ;  Baars, Roger C
Summary / Abstract (Note)Climate change education (CCE) can be an important tool to increase local community resilience. In 2017, the Pacific Community ratified the Framework for Resilient Development in the Pacific (FRDP) aiming to equip local communities with skills needed to become more climate change resilient. In 2018, Fiji implemented the Climate Change Resilience Programme (CCRP) at the University of the South Pacific (USP), the first of its kind in the South Pacific. This paper evaluates (i) the orientation and aim of the programme and (ii) how different stakeholders influenced the curriculum development process. Tribe's concept of curriculum space is used to highlight the overall aim of the CCRP. Freeman's stakeholder theory allows to identify key stakeholders and their influence on the curriculum. Results indicate that the programme seems to foster climate resilience in the workplace rather than the local community. Unfortunately, current and future community leaders, the notional targets of this course, were almost completely unrepresented in the process to accredit the course, with the body responsible for accreditation being dominated by industry representatives. This study helps to inform the current review of the Regional Certificate Programme to realign it with its initially envisioned community focus.
`In' analytical NoteAsia Pacific Viewpoint Vol. 64, No.1; Apr 2023: p.72-84
Journal SourceAsia Pacific Viewpoint 2023-04 64, 1
Key WordsSouth Pacific ;  Higher Education ;  Curriculum Development ;  Community Resilience ;  Climate Change Education ;  Vocational Learning