Abstract
ABSTRACT This paper takes walking-based research in early childhood education as a propositional space, one grounded in reconsidering witnessing as a practice attuned to co-emergence in waste landscapes. I draw from Ettinger’s (2001) and Boscacci’s (2018) word-concept wit(h)nessing to stake out some possibilities for walking-wit(h)nessing as an affective, relational practice for pedagogical responses to child-waste subjectivities in the ongoing global waste crisis. In doing so, I am careful to frame walking alongside waste landscapes as an invitational move towards resisting passive observation, one that refuses to extricate children, educators, and researchers from living-and-becoming with waste. I conclude by offering three propositions for walking-wit(h)nessing waste landscapes that open towards walking practices that embrace the tensions of waste and human/more-than-human enmeshment for enacting pedagogies that confront and counter status quo waste logics of invisibility, the problematics of scale, and solvability.
Published Version
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