This book challenges the concept of wellbeing as applied to children,
particularly in a school-based context. Taking a post-structural
approach, it suggests that wellbeing should be understood, and
experiences revealed, at the level of the subjective child. This runs
counter to contemporary accounts that reduce children's wellbeing to
objective lists of things that are needed in order to live well. This
book will be useful for academics and practitioners working directly
with children, and anyone interested in children's wellbeing.