Targeted temperature management encompasses a range of clinical interventions to regulate systemic temperature, and includes both induction of varying degrees of hypothermia and fever prevention ("targeted normothermia"). Targeted temperature management plays a key role in the contemporary management of critically ill neonates and children with acute brain injury. Yet, many unanswered questions remain regarding optimal temperature management in pediatric neurocritical care. The introduction highlights experimental studies that have evaluated the neuroprotective efficacy of therapeutic hypothermia and explored possible mechanisms of action in several brain injury models. The next section focuses on three major clinical conditions in which therapeutic hypothermia has been evaluated in randomized controlled trials in pediatric populations: neonatal hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, postcardiac arrest encephalopathy, and traumatic brain injury. Clinical implications of targeted temperature management in pediatric neurocritical care are also discussed. The final section examines some of the factors that may underlie the limited neuroprotective efficacy of hypothermia that has been observed in several major pediatric clinical trials, and outlines important directions for future research.