The authors propose that recognizing the relationship between space and citizenry enables engagement with societal issues such as equity, justice, and environmental stewardship. Through a theoretical explanation of key citizenship ideas, and by providing teaching tools, this volume is essential for education researchers and educators alike.
'This collection offers considerations of not only why the spatial should be in the conversation of citizenship but brings to bear timely and critical perspectives on citizenship itself. Pushing teachers and teacher educators to consider the role played by education in the formation of citizens by privileging the ways in which we are all entangled in a social, cultural, and political world-perhaps now more than ever-could not seem more right. Drawing broadly from education, democratic, and geographic theory, this volume is a useful addition to the scholarship on social studies, curriculum studies, and geography education.'
-Rob Helfenbein is the co-editor of 2017 volume Deterritorializing/Reterritorializing: Critical Geographies of Educational Reform and Editor of the Journal of Curriculum Theorizing
'Shin and Bednarz's book lays out clear and concise ideas for how one's individual practices - informed by geographical knowledge and regular interaction with modern and ubiquitous geospatial technologies - are a central element of engagement within the community and the world, at every scale. Geospatial thinking is a supportive infrastructure that supports wise decision-making, the backbone of healthy societies. This argument is universal in its applicability. The contributing authors in this book represent diverse perspectives and experiences, but together the collection presents compelling rationales for why and how the communal experience of citizenship benefits from the geospatial thinking that individuals and groups practice and apply. It's a unifying thread that crosses the rich diversity of human-environment relationships and settings that comprise our world.'
-Diana S. Sinton is the Executive Director of the University Consortium for Geographic Information Science (UCGIS) and the author of The People's Guide to Spatial Thinking (National Council for Geographic Education, 2013).