The approach suggests that adult (researchers) need to be cautious in their claims about understanding the world from a child’s perspective. It is not claimed that there are no connections between these two worlds, but rather that they can be at once very connected and close and very far apart. This is a common theme in some literature which considers childhood. Ideas of the otherness of childhood have connections with some children’s affinity with disordered spaces (those not managed and tidied by adult society) like waste ground in cities. They also have implications for trying to remember what it was like to be a child as a form of research and knowing childhood. This is, at best, a highly complex and multifaceted process which, again, cannot be assumed to give easy access to children’s worlds. This question has raised some critical repsonse within children's geographies (see Philo, 2003).