Hardback : HK$959.00
In this significantly revised second edition of Bronwyn Hayward's acclaimed book Children Citizenship and Environment, she examines how students, with teachers, parents, and other activists, can learn to take effective action to confront the complex drivers of the current climate crisis including: economic and social injustice, colonialism and racism. The global school strikes demand adults, governments, and businesses take far-reaching action in response to our climate crisis. The school strikes also remind us why this important youthful activism urgently needs the support of all generations.
The #SchoolStrike edition of Children Citizenship and Environment includes all new contributions by youth, indigenous and disability activists, researchers and educators: Raven Cretney, Mehedi Hasan, Sylvia Nissen, Jocelyn Papprill, Kate Prendergast, Kera Sherwood O' Regan, Mia Sutherland, Amanda Thomas, Sara Tolbert, Sarah Thomson, Josiah Tualamali'i, and Amelia Woods.
As controversial, yet ultimately hopeful, as it was when first published, Bronwyn Hayward develops her 'SEEDS' model of 'strong ecological citizenship' for a school strike generation. The SEEDS of citizenship education encourage students to develop skills for; Social agency, Environmental education, Embedded justice, Decentred deliberation and Self-transcendence. This approach to citizenship supports young citizens' democratic imagination and develops their 'handprint' for social justice.
This ground-breaking book will be of interest to a wide audience, in particular teachers and professionals who work in Environmental Citizenship Education, as well as students and community activists with an interest in environmental change, democracy and intergenerational justice.
Show moreIn this significantly revised second edition of Bronwyn Hayward's acclaimed book Children Citizenship and Environment, she examines how students, with teachers, parents, and other activists, can learn to take effective action to confront the complex drivers of the current climate crisis including: economic and social injustice, colonialism and racism. The global school strikes demand adults, governments, and businesses take far-reaching action in response to our climate crisis. The school strikes also remind us why this important youthful activism urgently needs the support of all generations.
The #SchoolStrike edition of Children Citizenship and Environment includes all new contributions by youth, indigenous and disability activists, researchers and educators: Raven Cretney, Mehedi Hasan, Sylvia Nissen, Jocelyn Papprill, Kate Prendergast, Kera Sherwood O' Regan, Mia Sutherland, Amanda Thomas, Sara Tolbert, Sarah Thomson, Josiah Tualamali'i, and Amelia Woods.
As controversial, yet ultimately hopeful, as it was when first published, Bronwyn Hayward develops her 'SEEDS' model of 'strong ecological citizenship' for a school strike generation. The SEEDS of citizenship education encourage students to develop skills for; Social agency, Environmental education, Embedded justice, Decentred deliberation and Self-transcendence. This approach to citizenship supports young citizens' democratic imagination and develops their 'handprint' for social justice.
This ground-breaking book will be of interest to a wide audience, in particular teachers and professionals who work in Environmental Citizenship Education, as well as students and community activists with an interest in environmental change, democracy and intergenerational justice.
Show more1. Supporting the #SchoolStrike generation 2. Neoliberalism and children’s everyday citizenship: ‘bowling with a sponsor’ or ‘DIY activism’? with Sylvia Nissen and Kate Prendergast 3. Growing greener citizens? SMART, FEARS or SEEDS citizenship? 4. Social agency: Learning how to make a difference with others 5. Environmental education for a chaotic climate 6. Embedded justice: learning about ecological rights and responsibilities 7. Decentered deliberation: can we strengthen democratic listening? 8. The social handprint, self transcendence and critical hope
Bronwyn Hayward is a Professor of Political Science and International Relations at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand. She was a lead author on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report on 1.5 degrees of global warming and is a coordinating lead author for the IPCC on cities and infrastructure. Bronwyn also leads CYCLES: the Children and Youth in Cities, Lifestyles Evaluation and Sustainability project for UK ESRC-funded Centre for Sustainable Prosperity at the University of Surrey. She has been a visiting fellow with the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change at the University of East Anglia. In addition to her academic work, Bronwyn has worked in children’s media and national parks and environmental policy. She has collaborated with youth researchers in Brazil, India, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, South Africa, the UK and USA.
"Bronwyn Hayward captures the struggles of a generation whose
present and future is threatened by climate change and other
interrelated crises. Her call for more democratic processes
highlights the need for deep social transformations, and her SEEDS
citizenship model provides us with an actionable framework for
nurturing political agency in support a vision of communitarian
ecological citizenship. This revised #SchoolStrike edition presents
a powerful perspective on youth activism and a growing movement
that is committed to equity and social justice." – Professor Karen
O’Brien, University of Oslo, Norway"Writing this during the
Covid-19 pandemic is a salutary reminder of the importance of books
like the second edition of Bronwyn Hayward's Children Citizenship
and Environment. Amidst our current crisis Hayward's book is a
source of hope. Hope in our young people and the next generation
rising to the challenge and opportunities for transformation
created by the planetary emergency. 'Hope is the thing with
feathers' the poet Emily Dickinson noted. But hope is also the
child standing with a poster demanding climate action now, as
Hayward's timely and important book tells us." – John Barry,
Professor of Green Political Economy, Queen's University Belfast,
Northern Ireland"Bronwyn Hayward is the rare political scientist
who listens to the political views of those who are too young to
vote. In Children Citizenship and Environment #SchoolStrike Edition
she shares the civic and environmental concerns of children and
adolescents and urges us to expand our political imagination, see
the connections between ecological and social crises, and embrace
the values of a new generation of moral and political activists." –
Professor Constance A. Flanagan, Vaughan Bascom Professor of Women,
Family, and Community, School of Human Ecology, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, USA."This new edition of Bronwyn Hayward’s
pathfinding text is an all-too-rare thing: serious scholarship that
is seriously useful. The book’s communitarian approach to
ecological citizenship gives clear pointers for adult allies,
teachers and parents that can help them support young people who
are having to make sense of an unprecedented body of challenges.
Faced with a chaotic climate, natural disasters, the threats of
terrorism and pandemics, young people need and deserve support in
developing the skills that will allow them to negotiate paths to a
better future. The book points to ways of supporting the
development of more engaged and effective young citizens in these
precarious times. In a nice modelling of the approach she
advocates, the voices of children and young adults of Hayward’s own
community of Christchurch, New Zealand, direct the book’s argument.
The vision of an inter-dependent ecological and citizenship
education offers an energetic and purposeful way of renewing our
democracy. The suggested recipe of imagination, creativity and
courage offers glimpses of a far better future." – Professor Joe
Smith, Director at UK Royal Geographic Society, UK.Praise for the
1st edition of Children, Citizenship and Environment‘Bronwyn
Hayward's magisterial book reminds us that it's not just the
biosphere that is threatened through environmental degradation, but
our children's imaginations as well, and hence all our future
hopes. As we won't achieve sustainable human wellbeing within a
flourishing biosphere without citizens who both care about
sustainability and are able to act on their concerns, we need to
take children seriously as political actors. Bronwyn Hayward argues
that, because we cannot live sustainably when social structures and
decision-making are unjust, we need to nurture young people as
citizens if they are to address the wide-ranging problems we've
created: dangerous environmental change, growing social inequality,
an unsustainable global economy, and weakening democracies. This
wonderful book should be read by all those who think today's
childhoods are fine, or who think that children are unfit for
democratic involvement, or that we'll get anywhere through
individual action – and also by those who already understand the
issues, and the importance of children's involvement in their
resolution, as they will be re-inspired; in other words, by
everyone.’ – William Scott, University of Bath, UK and President,
UK National Association for Environmental Education‘This book is a
glorious testament to fortitude, to brilliant scholarship, to the
wonderful voices of children's engagement, and to real hope that
the future can indeed be secure. Our job is to make it so. Bronwyn
Hayward shows how we can do this through the enlightened and
patient voices of tomorrow's sustainable citizens.’ – Tim
O'Riordan, University of East Anglia, UK‘Bronwyn Hayward's creative
masterpiece describes how we can escape the last 20 years of
neo-liberal thinking and its toxic impact on our precious children
today and in the future.’ – Susan St John, University of Auckland
and NZ Child Poverty Action Group spokesperson‘A thoughtful and
scholarly investigation of how we can create the conditions for
children to become confident, participating ecological citizens,
capable of collective imagination and action for a better world.
There can be no more important task for the future.’ – Jeanette
Fitzsimons, Co-Leader of the New Zealand Green Party and Member of
Parliament 1995–2009‘Bronwyn Hayward provides a timely, thoughtful
and constructive contribution to an important area of work:
understanding how children can develop environmental citizenship.
The generation growing up today need to be given the skills and
opportunities to engage in shaping their future, rather than be
expected to inherit the decisions made by adults now. Hayward makes
a strong argument for community collaboration and creative
imagination as some of the key ingredients.’ – Lucy Stone, climate
change advisor, UNICEF, UK‘In this inspiring book Bronwyn Hayward
explains how children have been left out of the political process
or included in only token ways, and the potential cost of this to
society. She describes how children can learn to be citizens by
engaging in democratic decision-making processes in their local
environments. Including children in decision-making benefits the
whole of society in unexpected ways. The book is compelling reading
for all those interested in the future of democracy and of the
environment.’ – Russell Wills, New Zealand Children's
Commissioner‘This book challenges the myths that our kids don't
care about what we do as a society and where we are headed. Bronwyn
Hayward shows, with alacrity and sensitivity, exactly how the new
generation might determine the future. Thought-provoking,
controversial and inspiring.’ – David Shearer, Leader of the New
Zealand Labour Party
'written with passion and energy … conveys its thesis with great
power' - Gary Clemitshaw, British Journal of Educational
Studies
'a thoughtful, powerful and timely case' - Nancy Erbstein,
Children, Youth and Environments
'This scholarly masterpiece … is a book full of hope that we can
reunite and re-structure politics so that it is one of collective
thinking, critical reasoning, compassion and reliance on each other
to maintain a sustainable world. I implore everyone to read it; it
is inspirational and above all crucially instructional in how we
can mould the social handprint of future generations for an
environmentally friendly world' – Jessica Richardson, Sherkin
Comment
'Hayward takes an unequivocal stance, urging readers to adopt new
practices which will better serve both children and the environment
[…] I recommend the book as vital reading for all who care for the
next generation, the future of democracy and the planet.'Bronwyn E.
Wood, Faculty of Education, Victoria University of Wellington, in
New Zealand Geographer
'Hayward directs policymakers to shift the focus away from aging
Baby Boomers and back to the world’s children who are most severely
impacted by environmental injustice. Written in an academic style
with many references to previous studies, this book must be read
slowly and thoughtfully. However, the ideas presented will be worth
the effort.' – Green Teacher
'This book is a gem. Drawing on a wide range of disciplines
including psychology, political science, sociology and
developmental economics, Bronwyn Hayward shows respect for
children’s thinking and contributes to the debates about how to
create processes for human flourishing. Children and the
environment are clearly at the centre of her thinking and the book
will delight child advocates and environmentalists. But it would be
a mistake to pigeonhole this book as only a book for child
advocates. It is not. Bronwyn uses children’s frames of reference
embedding in multi-disciplinary theory to show adults some paths to
creating sustainable development. Through her scholarship and
thoughtful approach to understanding children’s worlds, she adds a
different frame onto seemingly intractable problems of inequality,
climate change and democratic participation in wealthy nations.' -
New Zealand Sociology
'Children, Citizenship and Environment – Nurturing a democratic
imagination in a changing world – is a powerful book in terms of
the positions presented, questions asked and observations it makes,
particularly since they are linked to actual studies involving
children. There are many unique and mind-opening thoughts in this
book about society today that question the essence of citizenship,
how it is taught, learned and expressed.' - Jeff Thurston, Society
for the Protection of Nature in Lebanon
"Bronwyn Hayward captures the struggles of a generation whose
present and future is threatened by climate change and other
interrelated crises. Her call for more democratic processes
highlights the need for deep social transformations, and her SEEDS
citizenship model provides us with an actionable framework for
nurturing political agency in support a vision of communitarian
ecological citizenship. This revised #SchoolStrike edition presents
a powerful perspective on youth activism and a growing movement
that is committed to equity and social justice." – Professor Karen
O’Brien, University of Oslo, Norway"Writing this during the
Covid-19 pandemic is a salutary reminder of the importance of books
like the second edition of Bronwyn Hayward's Children Citizenship
and Environment. Amidst our current crisis Hayward's book is a
source of hope. Hope in our young people and the next generation
rising to the challenge and opportunities for transformation
created by the planetary emergency. 'Hope is the thing with
feathers' the poet Emily Dickinson noted. But hope is also the
child standing with a poster demanding climate action now, as
Hayward's timely and important book tells us." – John Barry,
Professor of Green Political Economy, Queen's University Belfast,
Northern Ireland"Bronwyn Hayward is the rare political scientist
who listens to the political views of those who are too young to
vote. In Children Citizenship and Environment #SchoolStrike Edition
she shares the civic and environmental concerns of children and
adolescents and urges us to expand our political imagination, see
the connections between ecological and social crises, and embrace
the values of a new generation of moral and political activists." –
Professor Constance A. Flanagan, Vaughan Bascom Professor of Women,
Family, and Community, School of Human Ecology, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, USA. "This new edition of Bronwyn Hayward’s
pathfinding text is an all-too-rare thing: serious scholarship that
is seriously useful. The book’s communitarian approach to
ecological citizenship gives clear pointers for adult allies,
teachers and parents that can help them support young people who
are having to make sense of an unprecedented body of challenges.
Faced with a chaotic climate, natural disasters, the threats of
terrorism and pandemics, young people need and deserve support in
developing the skills that will allow them to negotiate paths to a
better future. The book points to ways of supporting the
development of more engaged and effective young citizens in these
precarious times. In a nice modelling of the approach she
advocates, the voices of children and young adults of Hayward’s own
community of Christchurch, New Zealand, direct the book’s argument.
The vision of an inter-dependent ecological and citizenship
education offers an energetic and purposeful way of renewing our
democracy. The suggested recipe of imagination, creativity and
courage offers glimpses of a far better future." – Professor Joe
Smith, Director at UK Royal Geographic Society, UK.Praise for the
1st edition of Children, Citizenship and Environment‘Bronwyn
Hayward's magisterial book reminds us that it's not just the
biosphere that is threatened through environmental degradation, but
our children's imaginations as well, and hence all our future
hopes. As we won't achieve sustainable human wellbeing within a
flourishing biosphere without citizens who both care about
sustainability and are able to act on their concerns, we need to
take children seriously as political actors. Bronwyn Hayward argues
that, because we cannot live sustainably when social structures and
decision-making are unjust, we need to nurture young people as
citizens if they are to address the wide-ranging problems we've
created: dangerous environmental change, growing social inequality,
an unsustainable global economy, and weakening democracies. This
wonderful book should be read by all those who think today's
childhoods are fine, or who think that children are unfit for
democratic involvement, or that we'll get anywhere through
individual action – and also by those who already understand the
issues, and the importance of children's involvement in their
resolution, as they will be re-inspired; in other words, by
everyone.’ – William Scott, University of Bath, UK and President,
UK National Association for Environmental Education‘This book is a
glorious testament to fortitude, to brilliant scholarship, to the
wonderful voices of children's engagement, and to real hope that
the future can indeed be secure. Our job is to make it so. Bronwyn
Hayward shows how we can do this through the enlightened and
patient voices of tomorrow's sustainable citizens.’ – Tim
O'Riordan, University of East Anglia, UK‘Bronwyn Hayward's creative
masterpiece describes how we can escape the last 20 years of
neo-liberal thinking and its toxic impact on our precious children
today and in the future.’ – Susan St John, University of Auckland
and NZ Child Poverty Action Group spokesperson‘A thoughtful and
scholarly investigation of how we can create the conditions for
children to become confident, participating ecological citizens,
capable of collective imagination and action for a better world.
There can be no more important task for the future.’ – Jeanette
Fitzsimons, Co-Leader of the New Zealand Green Party and Member of
Parliament 1995–2009‘Bronwyn Hayward provides a timely, thoughtful
and constructive contribution to an important area of work:
understanding how children can develop environmental citizenship.
The generation growing up today need to be given the skills and
opportunities to engage in shaping their future, rather than be
expected to inherit the decisions made by adults now. Hayward makes
a strong argument for community collaboration and creative
imagination as some of the key ingredients.’ – Lucy Stone, climate
change advisor, UNICEF, UK‘In this inspiring book Bronwyn Hayward
explains how children have been left out of the political process
or included in only token ways, and the potential cost of this to
society. She describes how children can learn to be citizens by
engaging in democratic decision-making processes in their local
environments. Including children in decision-making benefits the
whole of society in unexpected ways. The book is compelling reading
for all those interested in the future of democracy and of the
environment.’ – Russell Wills, New Zealand Children's
Commissioner‘This book challenges the myths that our kids don't
care about what we do as a society and where we are headed. Bronwyn
Hayward shows, with alacrity and sensitivity, exactly how the new
generation might determine the future. Thought-provoking,
controversial and inspiring.’ – David Shearer, Leader of the New
Zealand Labour Party'written with passion and energy … conveys its
thesis with great power' - Gary Clemitshaw, British Journal of
Educational Studies'a thoughtful, powerful and timely case' - Nancy
Erbstein, Children, Youth and Environments'This scholarly
masterpiece … is a book full of hope that we can reunite and
re-structure politics so that it is one of collective thinking,
critical reasoning, compassion and reliance on each other to
maintain a sustainable world. I implore everyone to read it; it is
inspirational and above all crucially instructional in how we can
mould the social handprint of future generations for an
environmentally friendly world' – Jessica Richardson, Sherkin
Comment'Hayward takes an unequivocal stance, urging readers to
adopt new practices which will better serve both children and the
environment […] I recommend the book as vital reading for all who
care for the next generation, the future of democracy and the
planet.' Bronwyn E. Wood, Faculty of Education, Victoria University
of Wellington, in New Zealand Geographer'Hayward directs
policymakers to shift the focus away from aging Baby Boomers and
back to the world’s children who are most severely impacted by
environmental injustice. Written in an academic style with many
references to previous studies, this book must be read slowly and
thoughtfully. However, the ideas presented will be worth the
effort.' – Green Teacher'This book is a gem. Drawing on a wide
range of disciplines including psychology, political science,
sociology and developmental economics, Bronwyn Hayward shows
respect for children’s thinking and contributes to the debates
about how to create processes for human flourishing. Children and
the environment are clearly at the centre of her thinking and the
book will delight child advocates and environmentalists. But it
would be a mistake to pigeonhole this book as only a book for child
advocates. It is not. Bronwyn uses children’s frames of reference
embedding in multi-disciplinary theory to show adults some paths to
creating sustainable development. Through her scholarship and
thoughtful approach to understanding children’s worlds, she adds a
different frame onto seemingly intractable problems of inequality,
climate change and democratic participation in wealthy nations.' -
New Zealand Sociology'Children, Citizenship and Environment –
Nurturing a democratic imagination in a changing world – is a
powerful book in terms of the positions presented, questions asked
and observations it makes, particularly since they are linked to
actual studies involving children. There are many unique and
mind-opening thoughts in this book about society today that
question the essence of citizenship, how it is taught, learned and
expressed.' - Jeff Thurston, Society for the Protection of Nature
in Lebanon
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |