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List of Abbreviations -- Introduction. Nuclear Tourism as an Emerging Area of Learning about Nuclear Energy / Natalija Mažeikienė -- Revisiting Educational Potential of the Industrial Heritage Tourism: Ruhr Area in Germany and Ignalina Power Plant Region in Lithuania / Ilona Tandzegolskienė -- The Pedagogy of Dissonant Heritage: Soviet Industry in Museums and Textbooks / Linara Dovydaitytė -- Place and Language Transformations in a Post- Soviet Landscape: A Case Study of the Atomic City Visaginas / Ineta Dabašinskienė -- Energy Tourism at Nuclear Power Plants: Between Educational Mission and Retention of “Safety Myth” / Eglė Gerulaitienė and Natalija Mažeikienė -- Chernobyl Museum as an Educational Site: Transforming “Dark Tourists” Into Responsible Citizens and Knowledgeable Learners / Natalija Mažeikienė and Eglė Gerulaitienė -- Fun in the Power Plant. Edutainment in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone Tourism / Magdalena Banaszkiewicz -- What We Find Outdoors: Discovering Nuclear Tourism Through Educational Pathways / Lina Kaminskienė -- Innovative Technological Solutions in Virtual Nuclear Education / Judita Kasperiūnienė -- Energy Literacy in Geography Curriculum: Redefining the Role of Nuclear Power in Changing Energy Landscapes / Odeta Norkutė and Natalija Mažeikienė -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- About the Authors. This book illuminates the educational potential of nuclear tourism and learning about nuclear power in informal and non-formal learning settings. The authors present a case of elaboration of the educational virtual nuclear route in the Ignalina Power Plant Region, Lithuania. Nuclear tourism takes its shape at the junction of several types of tourism – energy, industrial, cultural, and heritage and it becomes a site of outdoor and place-based education, promotes STEM, energy literacy, critical thinking, and environmental skills, and creates a valuable source for virtual learning. The book reveals peculiarities of learning and experience at nuclear power plants and disaster tourism destinations such as the Chernobyl Museum and the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. |