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Environmental Education and Children's Agency at the Time of the Anthropocene

Anna Kouppanou

2020Journal of Philosophy of Education24 citationsDOI

Abstract

During the Anthropocene, the epoch characterized by humans’ destructive actions on earth, a few seminal questions may be raised: What have we done? How can we do better? This type of questioning is of course echoed in environmental education, related educational policy and research. There is, however, a difference between general and educational discourses: in the first instance, the collective ‘we’ refers to mainly adult human beings; in the second, to children. The distinction may seem trivial, but it is in fact quite important: If humans have destroyed the earth and caused children the loss of their futures, then adult humans and children humans cannot be positioned in the same place in terms of humanity and agency. What's more, adults cannot look to children and their agency for hope or for a future. Children's agency thus demands a reorientation and a certain re-theorization. This paper deliberates on the type of children's agency that is promoted by various environmental discourses—human, posthuman and other—and discusses what kind of agency children can possibly attain.

Topics & Concepts

AnthropoceneAgency (philosophy)PosthumanHumanityEnvironmental ethicsFutures contractSociologyEnvironmental educationEpistemologyPhilosophy of educationSocial sciencePolitical scienceLawPedagogyPhilosophyHigher educationEconomicsFinancial economicsEnvironmental Education and SustainabilityPosthumanist Ethics and ActivismChildren's Rights and Participation
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