While few could dispute the need for Environmental and Sustainability Education (ESE) for children and young people, this book explores the problems inherent in this educational practice. Despite good intentions, the author highlights how ESE can in fact contribute to a (re)production of harmful norms and possible subjectivities by categorizing various groups as ‘threats’ to the environment. The author analyzes how these categorizations are entangled in historical discourses on social class, nationality and race, thus resulting in double gestures of inclusion and exclusion. Even as sustainability and environmental engagement becomes a treasured identity for the affluent, the author highlights that despite the best of intentions, the discour...
This paper draws on the meta‐theory of Critical Realism providing a theoretical basis for the pedago...
Childhood and, by implication, education are seen by many as practical stages for engaging people wi...
This article reflects on implications of presenting nature as a social construction, and of commodif...
This Open Access book is about the development of a common understanding of environmental citizenshi...
Education for sustainability in early childhood tends to focus on practices and advocacy, rather tha...
The increasing awareness of the human impact on the environment is having a profound effect on the c...
"Children growing up today are confronted by four difficult and intersecting challenges: dangerous e...
Despite efforts over the past 40 plus years, environmental sustainability is still on the margins of...
This article explores the implications of the shift of environmental education (EE) towards educatio...
This article explores the implications of the shift of environmental education (EE) towards educa...
This contribution provides some insights in possible future developments in Environmental and Sustai...
Education is supposed to advance humans towards the common good and a better future, but the present...
In the past decade, we have seen the well-established discourse of environmental education (EE) supp...
This chapter aims at distilling 20 years of research in intercultural and social justice education r...
Early Childhood Education for Sustainability (ECEfS) explores sustainability and its educational res...
This paper draws on the meta‐theory of Critical Realism providing a theoretical basis for the pedago...
Childhood and, by implication, education are seen by many as practical stages for engaging people wi...
This article reflects on implications of presenting nature as a social construction, and of commodif...
This Open Access book is about the development of a common understanding of environmental citizenshi...
Education for sustainability in early childhood tends to focus on practices and advocacy, rather tha...
The increasing awareness of the human impact on the environment is having a profound effect on the c...
"Children growing up today are confronted by four difficult and intersecting challenges: dangerous e...
Despite efforts over the past 40 plus years, environmental sustainability is still on the margins of...
This article explores the implications of the shift of environmental education (EE) towards educatio...
This article explores the implications of the shift of environmental education (EE) towards educa...
This contribution provides some insights in possible future developments in Environmental and Sustai...
Education is supposed to advance humans towards the common good and a better future, but the present...
In the past decade, we have seen the well-established discourse of environmental education (EE) supp...
This chapter aims at distilling 20 years of research in intercultural and social justice education r...
Early Childhood Education for Sustainability (ECEfS) explores sustainability and its educational res...
This paper draws on the meta‐theory of Critical Realism providing a theoretical basis for the pedago...
Childhood and, by implication, education are seen by many as practical stages for engaging people wi...
This article reflects on implications of presenting nature as a social construction, and of commodif...