Nationalism in many parts of the world takes new shapes merging with populist, far-right, nativist and green agendas illustrating how political evocations of the nation enjoy growing electoral success. One consequence among many is that previously 'settled' matters around racism, fascism and migration, are once again up for debate with elected officials and media personalities able to express any number of views without recourse to an apology (Wodak 2020). The provoked cynicism and anger infiltrates many spaces of children's everyday lives (Zembylas 2021a, 2021b) inclusive of the broad range of social media platforms, institutions they inhabit, and everyday interactions. The discursive and ideological structures of nationalism have received significant attention in childhood studies, however, today it is apparent that its affective dimensions and exclusionary pedagogical implications require renewed attention as political struggles are increasingly affectively and discursively expressed in institutional spaces, such as the family, preschool, school and so on (see e.g. Zembylas 2021a, 2021b).This special issue emerged from a continued interest in the intersections of childhood and nation, and nationalisms' growing prominence in national and international politics (e.g. Millei and Imre 2015;Millei 2014Millei , 2015. In offering a unique contribution to the exploration of nationalism as part of everyday life, this issue focuses on children and nationhood mostly in institutional settings. Many academic fields have developed an interest in researching everyday life and nationhood, such as political geography, nationalism studies, social psychology, education or political anthropology. A large number of studies explore 'banal' nationalism by drawing on Michael Billig's work (1995), and investigating how people mobilize elite (state) symbols, nationalist discourses, and sense-making in their social interactions. In another stream of research, attention is paid to 'everyday' forms of nationalism, on how people reinterpret elite discourses or create their own versions of nationhood enacted as everyday practices (Skey and Antonsich 2017;Skey 2011;Fox and Miller-Idriss 2008). Bringing together these bodies of work with a keen interest in children and childhood, scholars were invited to explore nationhood in children's everyday lives in this special issue.'Banal nationalism' (Billig 1995) focuses on national narratives, identities, and symbols of nationhood, as well as the social and psychological dynamics that underpin those. Research explores how institutional cultures are reproduced and discursive tropes create and shape the experience of everyday life. This is a more top-down approach of exploring quotidian forms of nationalism, according to Eleanor Knott (2016) (following Eric Hobsbawm's (1992) differentiation). Eric Hobsbawm (1992, p. 10) also highlights the importance of more bottom-up aspects of nationalism, including our understandings of the 'assumptions, hopes, needs, longings and interests of ordinary people' tha...