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E-raamat: Diverse Spaces of Childhood and Youth: Gender and socio-cultural differences

Edited by (University of Loughborough, UK), Edited by (University of Reading, UK)
  • Formaat: 216 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Apr-2016
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781134926619
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: 216 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Apr-2016
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781134926619

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Diverse Spaces of Childhood and Youth focuses on the diverse spaces and discourses of children and youth globally. The chapters explore the influence of gender, age and other socio-cultural differences, such as race, ethnicity and migration trajectories, on the everyday lives of children and youth in a range of international contexts. These include the diverse urban environments of Istanbul, Copenhagen, Helsinki, Toronto, London, and Bratislava and the contrasting rural settings of Ghana and England. The analyses of children's, young people's, parents' and professionals' experiences and discourses provide critical insights into how gender and other socio-cultural differences intersect. The importance of everyday practices and performances in the formation of children's and young people's identities is revealed, through for example, friendships and everyday sociality, mobilities and movements across space in both rural and urban environments.

The volume shows how discourses of childhood, particularly those associated with risk, intersect with difference. The recognition of young people’s agency and participation is central to many of the chapters, whilst also raising methodological questions about how discourses of childhood and youth are researched. Overall, the book provides an original contribution to geographies of children, youth and families and research on diversity and difference in global contexts.

This book was published as a special issue of Children's Geographies.



This book explores the diverse spaces and discourses of children and youth globally, with a particular focus on gender, age and other socio-cultural differences such as race, ethnicity and migration trajectories. It provides an original contribution to geographies of children, youth and families and research on diversity and difference in global

1. Diverse spaces of childhood and youth: gender and other
socio-cultural differences
2. Place, childrens friendships, and the
formation of gender identities in a Slovak urban neighbourhood
3. Girls just
like to be friends with people: gendered experiences of migration among
children and youth in returning Irish migrant families
4. The strength of
weak ties: the social networks of young separated asylum seekers and refugees
in London
5. In/visibility strategies and enacted diversity: sameness and
belonging among young people of Latin American descent living in the north of
England (UK)
6. Rhythmanalytical sketches: agencies, school journeys,
temporalities
7. The unchildlike child: making and marking the child/adult
divide in the juvenile court
8. Shaping childrens mobilities: expectations
of gendered parenting in the English rural idyll
9. Mobility, education and
livelihood trajectories for young people in rural Ghana: a gender perspective
10. Risky positions? Shifting representations of urban youth in the talk of
professionals and young people
11. Exploring parental concerns about
childrens interactions in gated communities: a case study in Istanbul
12.
Defining and exploring public space: perspectives of young people from Regent
Park, Toronto
13. Young peoples participation in school design: exploring
diversity and power in a UK governmental policy case-study
14. Korítsia,
Bambini, Meninos, Niñas: a view of childrens geographies in southern Europe
Ruth Evans is a Lecturer in Human Geography at the University of Reading. Using qualitative participatory methodologies, her recent research has investigated the experiences of children caring for parents with HIV in Tanzania and the UK, sibling care in youth-headed households in East Africa, and access to land, gender and intergenerational relations in West Africa.

Louise Holt is a Senior Lecturer in Human Geography at Loughborough University. Her research interests focus on socio-spatial processes of exclusion, inclusion, embodiment and identity, and social capital. She has explored these theoretical and conceptual themes in empirical research investigating children, young people and families, disability, gentrification, and urban change.