Since mid-2018, school students across the world have been leading mass strikes to demand strengthened political action on climate change. This article explores how young people’s political participation in the School Strike for Climate movement in Australia was represented in newspaper coverage over a 17-month period (August 2018–December 2019), with particular attention to the representation of young people’s emotions and actions. The analysis works with a corpus of 500 articles published in Australian national, state (New South Wales and Victoria), and a select sample of regional and rural newspapers. The corpus is read with affective-discursive attunement to historical representations of children and young people, the politics of emotio...
Beginning in 2018, youth across the globe participated in protest activities aimed at encouraging go...
This article examines youth participation the school climate strikes of 2018 and 2019 (also known as...
As "alternative" [Maeseele, 2009, p. 56] science communicators, young people (of pre-voting age) hav...
The Global Climate Strike (GCS) movement is by far the largest and most international youth protest ...
In this chapter, we have shared one account of the School Strike 4 Climate. In doing so, we argue th...
The School Strike for Climate campaign led to public discussion about children’s political participa...
Since 2018, school students around the world have gone on strike from school to call on leaders to t...
In August 2018, Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg started to strike from school on Fridays to protest ...
Climate change is an anthropogenic, geological issue that has earned much attention in the past few ...
Youth-led movements like #FridaysforFuture and the school strikes for climate (henceforth referred t...
Young people’s climate activism must stand as one of the most remarkable and important mass movement...
Abstract t Two school strikers − Niamh and Harriet − come together with two environmental education...
Although there is a developing strand of literature on young people’s participation in environmental...
International audienceAbstract The year 2018 was a watershed in environmental activism, especially r...
In November 2018 and again on March 15th this year, thousands of Australian school students walked o...
Beginning in 2018, youth across the globe participated in protest activities aimed at encouraging go...
This article examines youth participation the school climate strikes of 2018 and 2019 (also known as...
As "alternative" [Maeseele, 2009, p. 56] science communicators, young people (of pre-voting age) hav...
The Global Climate Strike (GCS) movement is by far the largest and most international youth protest ...
In this chapter, we have shared one account of the School Strike 4 Climate. In doing so, we argue th...
The School Strike for Climate campaign led to public discussion about children’s political participa...
Since 2018, school students around the world have gone on strike from school to call on leaders to t...
In August 2018, Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg started to strike from school on Fridays to protest ...
Climate change is an anthropogenic, geological issue that has earned much attention in the past few ...
Youth-led movements like #FridaysforFuture and the school strikes for climate (henceforth referred t...
Young people’s climate activism must stand as one of the most remarkable and important mass movement...
Abstract t Two school strikers − Niamh and Harriet − come together with two environmental education...
Although there is a developing strand of literature on young people’s participation in environmental...
International audienceAbstract The year 2018 was a watershed in environmental activism, especially r...
In November 2018 and again on March 15th this year, thousands of Australian school students walked o...
Beginning in 2018, youth across the globe participated in protest activities aimed at encouraging go...
This article examines youth participation the school climate strikes of 2018 and 2019 (also known as...
As "alternative" [Maeseele, 2009, p. 56] science communicators, young people (of pre-voting age) hav...