2023
DOI: 10.1177/00345237231160090
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“We’re fighting for our lives”: Centering affective, collective and systemic approaches to climate justice education as a youth mental health imperative

Abstract: Young people’s ongoing, necessary confrontation with painful and distressing realities exacerbated by ecological precarity in diverse contexts has profound implications for formal education systems. Additionally, educational policy in many contexts has been slow to respond to the urgency of addressing climate change, nor has most policy robustly conceptualized a vision for climate justice education. Centering the voices of three young climate justice activists (ages 16–20) in Canada through a qualitative study… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…With key exceptions (e.g., Kowasch, 2023;Neas, 2023;Vamvalis, 2023), few studies with youth climate justice activists have examined their perspectives and experiences of learning about climate change in schools and how they envision alternative educational practices with the capacity to advance climate justice. Towards reimagining climate pedagogies alongside youth activists, the present study used in-depth interviews to understand whether and how they learned about climate change and/or climate justice in schools as well as their recommendations for educational approaches and policies that both reflect and work to address multi-faceted climate injustices.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With key exceptions (e.g., Kowasch, 2023;Neas, 2023;Vamvalis, 2023), few studies with youth climate justice activists have examined their perspectives and experiences of learning about climate change in schools and how they envision alternative educational practices with the capacity to advance climate justice. Towards reimagining climate pedagogies alongside youth activists, the present study used in-depth interviews to understand whether and how they learned about climate change and/or climate justice in schools as well as their recommendations for educational approaches and policies that both reflect and work to address multi-faceted climate injustices.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%