img3.jpg

Login Form






Lost Password?

Syndicate

More...

Who's Online

Site Closed
Written by Administrator   
Saturday, 16 May 2009

After two years, I am closing off this environmental gateway web site and its associated enviroblog weblog. I set up environmental gateway as both a repository for research records and as a way of maintaining connections across the alumni of the Centre for Ecological Economics and Water Policy Research, closed by the University of New England via a fit of astoundingly dysfunctional, managerialist restructuring (a transdisciplinary research group such as our Centre had no place in the new vision of disciplinary silos now firmly implemented and protected by an academic research establishment with no real notion of across-disciplinary inspiration and collaborative synergy). Given that the Centre was not provided with any pathways through which to negotiate a future at its host university, it's inventory of research resources were simply cut without contemplation of how those materials might be made available to the community via a publicly assessable legacy. As the Director of that Centre, I felt those resources should be made available to those who had supported our initiative over its proud 22 year journey. I thus created the Environmental Gateway web cluster as a private initiative, at my own expense, simply to offer continued access to materials that I consider still have some positive value to the environmental and resources policy areas. Two years is enough to provide continued access to those resources so now it's time to close off the facility. This also means that the associated transdisciplinary and water gateway sites will also go.

My interest in writing around the general territory of re-imagining opportunities for dealing with the world's pressing environmental issues through across- or transdisciplinary interaction and learning remains, so I am going to keep on writing for as long as I am able. There are so many new opportunities for intellectual exchange and learning emerging through the open-communicative discourse of the internet. The future of laterally reconfigured alternatives to disciplinarily free-form learning is exciting, if not disturbing to established communicative interests. We are right on the edge of a tipping point from the old 'expertocratic' model of instruction to more interestingly collaborative, if not discursively-bracing learning frameworks. 

The key problem with the standard model of academia is its inclination to self referentialism as a setting for individual and group validation. Peer reviewed publishing is, I think, a poor option in terms of being a vehicle through which to spark new ideas and intellectual progress. But peer reviewed publishing still remains the be-all-end-all of conventional academia to this day. Personally, I could not care less  about miniscule readership, arcane, communicatively exclusive publishing. Innovative thinking is, I would suggest, poorly serviced by the conservatism and closed-shop character of an exclusive or dominant reliance upon peer self-referentialised publishing. The transdisciplinary project with which I have been engaged for 20 years or so is, or should be, all about harnessing the opportunities to be realised through breaking down disciplinary cliques to the insight and learning available through interaction with a broader, more eclectic and even discursively-disorganised pool. 

For me, my interests now turn to fulfilling my lifetime interest in communication through the synthesis of words and image. My focus is on writing and photography combined. So, I have created a new front door to the next iteration of my professional life in the form of rodericgill.com . Associated with that new internet home is my new blog: PhotoEssays . That new blog will constitute the next generation of enviroblog. Naturally, my entire bicyclism.net /bicyclism.blog adventures will continued unabated. I'd certainly appreciate the readership of envoblog travelling with me to the new PhotoEssays space. I have a few posts up and running there already.


Thanks for your interest in my 'academic projects' to date.

Last Updated ( Monday, 25 May 2009 )
 
The Power of Twittering
Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 12 August 2008

ImageBoth Environmental Gateway and its 'academic' sister site, Transdisciplinary Gateway share an interactive user forum: Transforum .  Transforum is the place where users (anyone who elects to register for access -like everything else to do with Environmental Gateway and Transdisciplinary Gateway; all for free) can interact and contribute to discussion on topics of interest.  Transforum is intended to support 'deeper' levels of debate and was designed as a kind of 'tea room' for that group who were dispossessed from the University of New England, Australia, following an unfortunate and demoniacal restructuring process. But this is a tea room for everyone who is interested in more detailed discussions; it's a learning forum; a forum of exchange. 

With Transforum set up and running, we still needed a kind of 'window' or notice board to summarise and extend the discussions from within. The social networking phenonemon of Twitter offers precisely that service.  So, your administrator has set up a Twitter space for Transforum and you are invited to 'follow' and contribute to that very abbreviated conversation.  You will notice that Transforum Twitter updates are also posted right on the front page of both the Environmental Gateway and Transdisciplinary Gateway sites.  

Twitter is a free social networking service to which anyone can subscribe and contribute. Posts are limited to 140 characters.  It's a bit like MSN or even text messaging. Except that you can access and post messages from your web browser, dedicated Twitter feed software or even your mobile phone. The easiest solution is to simply visit Twitter.com and sign up.  You can read and write messages right from your web browser once you log on. Or you can download special software like Twitteriffic or Twhirl which both provide some additional control over how you interact with your Twitter feeds.  Once you are set up, you are encouraged to then search for and 'follow' Transforum (www.twitter.com/transforum ). Of course, you can add other Twitter feeds to follow as well; tens, hundreds or thousands of other feeds.  You can also post messages, ideas or concise inspirations as much as you like.  Those who elect to follow you will then receive your 'tweets'. Twitter folk can interact through replying to individual posts or direct messaging (a kind of email service limited to 140 characters).  You need to launch to really get a feel for how all this works and the first step is to visit Twitter.com .  Use the search bar to enter topics that interst you (like, say, 'sustainability'). You will then be presented with a list of 'Twitter people' who have included the word you searched for in their bio details (everyone who put the word 'sustainability'  in their bio line). You can then decide to follow people from this list (you can see each person's string of recent posts and decide if you are interested in what that person has to say and want to 'follow' their 'tweets' - you can 'unfollow' at any time if you like).  

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 12 August 2008 )
 
Global Warming and the Water Crisis: Catalysing Necessary Change
Written by Administrator   
Thursday, 31 July 2008
ImageLast year we were being told that Australia was about to run short on food as Australia’s Murray Darling Basin dries up from lack of rain (see the ‘Murray Running on Empty Story’ story in the Australian Newspaper).   If it does not rain soon,  irrigated agricultural production will fail and food prices will rise. This on top of a climate crisis makes for an ever upward ratcheting of community concern about ‘the environment’.    After all the spin on reinventing water governance via the previous Australian Prime Minister’s ($10 billion) Water Initiative, when it comes down to it, over use and under supply of water will make its point more clearly than any carefully worded policy priority statement. Despite the fact that it has rained a bit since those recent times of total gloom and doom, Australia's water crisis is still centre stage; and is likely to stay there for ever more. Until we can collectively travel down a few new pathways paved by creative thinking and genuine cultural shifts.
Last Updated ( Thursday, 31 July 2008 )
Read more...
 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 Next > End >>

Results 1 - 4 of 13