This book addresses different types of disasters, both human crises and environmental disasters, and their implications on the education and social-emotional development of young children (birth through age 8). This volume is a new edition to "Assisting Young Children caught in Disaster: Multidisciplinary Perspectives and Interventions" that highlighted 14 different disasters. This edition revisits some of the main topics in the previous edition from 2018 and also focuses on some recent crises, such as community and school violence, infectious diseases, recent gang activities in Haiti, and child trafficking during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. Furthermore, it provides strategies regarding trauma-informed practice and coping with the aftermath of violence, terrorism, and living in war torn contexts.
As both the research literature and current events indicate, almost every day, children around the world experience some type of a crisis. According to UNICEF's 2023 report, " .. there have been an unprecedented number of humanitarian emergencies - natural and human-made - unfolding around the world." These include violence, armed conflicts, floods, earthquakes, and hurricanes. Children who experience these conflicts most likely also experience poverty and become more vulnerable to malnutrition and diseases.
As the previous edition indicates, such crises and trauma have various consequences on the lives of children such as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and depression. Although governments and agencies have done a large amount of work to address the needs of children affected by disasters, early childhood teachers often still feel helpless and not prepared to address these needs in their classrooms. This new edition provides both pre- and in-service early childhood teachers with such support.
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Springer International Publishing
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978-3-032-13683-1 (9783032136831)
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Judit Szente is Professor of Early Childhood at the University of Central Florida, USA. Her research interests include the education of children caught in disasters, early childhood teacher education, and international collaborations. She is a former United Nations Representative of the Association for Childhood Education International and participated in teaching/learning programs in Bulgaria, Denmark, England, Ethiopia, Finland, Hungary, Italy, Japan, and the United States. She currently serves as Editor-in-Chief of the 'Journal of Early Childhood Teacher Education' and an Editorial Board Member of 'Educating the Young Child: Advances in Theory and Research, Implications for Practice.'