Geographies of Global Issues: Change and Threat | ISBN 9789814585538

Geographies of Global Issues: Change and Threat

herausgegeben von Nicola Ansell, Natascha Klocker und Tracey Skelton
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonNicola Ansell
Herausgegeben vonNatascha Klocker
Herausgegeben vonTracey Skelton
Buchcover Geographies of Global Issues: Change and Threat  | EAN 9789814585538 | ISBN 981-4585-53-X | ISBN 978-981-4585-53-8

Geographies of Global Issues: Change and Threat

herausgegeben von Nicola Ansell, Natascha Klocker und Tracey Skelton
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonNicola Ansell
Herausgegeben vonNatascha Klocker
Herausgegeben vonTracey Skelton

Volume 8 explores children and young people’s lives at a time of rapid and profound change, through the lens of diverse global processes: economic globalisation, environmental degradation, international development, cultural change, climate change and environmental hazards. Today’s children and young people are growing up in a world that is rapidly changing and very different to that experienced by previous generations. Contemporary social, economic and environmental challenges make children and young people vulnerable and expose them to harm. Equally, they compel them to become instigators of change across geographical scales, from the household to the globe. Children and young people need to be adaptive and resourceful: economically, socially and emotionally.

This volume is divided into two substantive sections. Chapters in the first section explore global economic changes and instabilities that are altering patterns of work, compelling children to take on new economic responsibilities and reshaping childcare arrangements. Several chapters address the ways in which global processes shape young people’s subjectivities, with media, internet and education encouraging children and youth to view themselves as both entrepreneurs and global citizens. Other chapters consider the policies and development interventions implemented by global organisations and national governments. These can have unintended consequences because they are rooted in a normative discourse of a ‘global child’ that bears little relation to lived realities.

Chapters in the second section foreground children and young people’s contributions to environmental issues and debates. Children and young people are affected by environmental change: by pollution, environmental hazards and climate change. They suffer displacement, ill-health and anxiety about the future. They are also intimately attached to – and knowledgeable about – their local environments. Children and young people actively shape their environments, yet their lives remain powerfully influenced by today’s decision-makers. The window of opportunity to avoid catastrophic climate change is small. Evidence of children and young people’s environmental knowledge and activism does not obviate the need for adults to take decisive action, now, to ensure a viable environment for future generations.