Description
"A transformative book . . . The author’s clear prose, gripping stories, and delightful photographs bring complex ideas and rigorous interdisciplinary research to life. Woodhouse is a realist; she recognizes that we may have passed the tipping point. But she concludes what may turn out to be a grim story with concrete strategies, making a powerful and convincing case that ‘universal human rights, far from being distant abstractions, can serve as a blueprint for preserving and protecting the small worlds of children.’ A brilliant, deeply thoughtful, and important book, not just for academics and social scientists, but for anyone who cares about children or the planet."
"A transformative book . . . The author’s clear prose, gripping stories, and delightful photographs bring complex ideas and rigorous interdisciplinary research to life. Woodhouse is a realist; she recognizes that we may have passed the tipping point. But she concludes what may turn out to be a grim story with concrete strategies, making a powerful and convincing case that ‘universal human rights, far from being distant abstractions, can serve as a blueprint for preserving and protecting the small worlds of children.’ A brilliant, deeply thoughtful, and important book, not just for academics and social scientists, but for anyone who cares about children or the planet."
"A rare achievement in the literature both on childhood and on human rights, beautifully crafted [with] an impressive variety of research methods and multi-disciplinary analysis. She makes a totally compelling call for us to recognize the problems of the ’small’ as global problems, inextricably intertwined in space and time. Essential reading not only for the study of childhoods but also for anyone whose decisions affect children—that is, the whole of humankind."
"A rare achievement in the literature both on childhood and on human rights, beautifully crafted [with] an impressive variety of research methods and multi-disciplinary analysis. She makes a totally compelling call for us to recognize the problems of the ’small’ as global problems, inextricably intertwined in space and time. Essential reading not only for the study of childhoods but also for anyone whose decisions affect children—that is, the whole of humankind."
"The Ecology of Childhood invites the reader to join Woodhouse, one of the leading authorities on children’s rights, on a remarkable journey—one in which she demonstrates an exceptional ability to understand children and connect their lived experience to the law and other systems that govern the lives of children and families. An extraordinary interdisciplinary book that articulates a vision for how we can build communities, and ultimately a world, in which all children can thrive."
"Recommended for All Levels."
Barbara Bennett Woodhouse is L. Q. C. Lamar Professor of Law at Emory University and director of the Emory Child Rights Project. She is the author of The Ecology of Childhood: How Our Changing World Threatens Children;s Rights (NYU Press, 2020) and Hidden in Plain Sight: The Tragedy of Children’s Rights from Ben Franklin to Lionel Tate (Princeton University Press, 2008).