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School strike for climate: A reckoning for education
76
Citations
28
References
2022
Year
Climate EthicsEducational OutcomesEducationLawClimate CrisisClimate PolicyElementary EducationTeacher EducationGlobal School StrikesEducational PolicyClimate Change LawSociology Of EducationClimate ActionSystem Young PeopleClimate LawPublic PolicyYoung PeopleSchool StrikeClimate CommunicationEnvironmental JusticeClimate JusticeSecondary EducationSocial Foundations Of EducationSustaining EducationSocial FoundationsClimate GovernanceEducation PolicyFoundations Of Education
Abstract In this article framing the special issue on the global school strikes for climate, we ask: what if education is not the solution, but part of the system young people want to change? In conversation with school strikers and reflecting on the contributions to this issue, we argue that the strikes pose a reckoning for education. Five key themes emerge from this special issue: (1) students are striking because of the affective weight of climate injustice; (2) students learn through their participation in striking, in contrast to the often insufficient climate change education taught in schools; (3) young people are becoming climate change educators through their roles as strikers; (4) strikers are patronised through paternalistic structures (including schooling) that ostensibly exist to protect them; and therefore (5) we need to reimagine education. We then advance four propositions for education in response to young people’s modest demands for a liveable future: (1) young people are in and of the collapsing climate; (2) youth voices need to be taken seriously, without excusing adult and collective responsibilities; (3) multigenerational, more-than-human, intercultural collaborations must be practiced in education for climate justice; and (4) we must learn to navigate ontological uncertainty and attend to ethical complexity.
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