Ethiopian students' relationship with their environment: implications for environmental and climate adaptation programmes

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Ethiopian students' relationship with their environment: implications for environmental and climate adaptation programmes
Abstract
Historically the voices of young people have been excluded from research and debates about how to respond to environmental degradation and climate change. To include the perspectives of young people in the climate change and adaptation debate, we conducted a Photovoice and draw-and-write project with 29 school students in Ethiopia, through which students were given a platform to explore their social representations of the environment. Thematic analysis of our findings suggested that young people have a deep appreciation of the moral, health-related and economic importance of the environment, a commitment to preserving it and a sense of responsibility and agency in relation to contributing to this preservation. Students saw environmental degradation as reversible, through a combination of commitment by themselves, local government and the global community. We conclude by discussing ways our findings might best be taken up in school-level programmes to strengthen youths’ existing social networks for the consolidation of ‘green’ identities, action and activism.
Publication
Children's Geographies
Volume
11
Issue
4
Pages
436-460
Date
2013-11-01
Journal Abbr
Children's Geographies
Call Number
openalex:W2043561755
Extra
openalex:W2043561755 mag:2043561755
Citation
Campbell, E., Skovdal, M., & Campbell, C. (2013). Ethiopian students’ relationship with their environment: implications for environmental and climate adaptation programmes. Children’s Geographies, 11(4), 436–460. https://doi.org/10.1080/14733285.2013.812302