“…Whilst agreeing with this teacher educator, and the 'A Different View' manifesto, we also argue that drawing on academic literature in children's geographies, and being familiar with (international) policies designed to empower, and enable, children (such as the United Nation's Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC, 1989)), are also necessary to enable teachers to fully understand the power, and potential, of drawing on children's geographies to enhance geography education. The absence of reference to these literatures by geography teacher educators in this research, is suggestive of the wider existence of 'gated communities' (Horton, Kraftl and Tucker, 2008;Evans and Holt, 2011), restricting the range and terms of debate, inadvertently restricting access and interactions between communities, even when they have a shared (research) interest of mutual benefit.…”