Rethinking Youth

Rethinking Youth
Title Rethinking Youth PDF eBook
Author Rob White
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 135
Release 2020-08-05
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1000257746

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Young people grow up in varied circumstances with different priorities and perspectives. While youth does not exist as a single group we need to understand what is happening in young people's lives. Rethinking Youth challenges the conventional wisdoms surrounding the position and opportunities of young people today and provides a systematic overview of the major perspectives in youth studies. The authors demonstrate how the concept of youth involves a tension between the social significance of age, which gives young people a common status, and the significance of social divisions. Drawing upon studies from different societies, they examine debates surrounding youth and economy, youth development, youth subcultures, youth transitions and youth marginalisation. Rethinking Youth offers a provocative critique of mainstream conceptions of youth, the programs and strategies designed for 'at risk' young people, and policy development in youth affairs. It calls for greater sensitivity to the complexities of youth, and greater emphasis on democracy and equality in dealing with the problems experienced by young people in a rapidly changing world. Johanna Wyn is Director of the Youth Research Centre at the University of Melbourne. Rob White lectures in Criminology at the University of Melbourne.

Rethinking Youth Wellbeing

Rethinking Youth Wellbeing
Title Rethinking Youth Wellbeing PDF eBook
Author Katie Wright
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 229
Release 2014-11-01
Genre Social Science
ISBN 9812871888

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This volume offers a critical rethinking of the construct of youth wellbeing, stepping back from taken-for-granted and psychologically inflected understandings. Wellbeing has become a catchphrase in educational, health and social care policies internationally, informing a range of school programs and social interventions and increasingly shaping everyday understandings of young people. Drawing on research by established and emerging scholars in Australia, Singapore and the UK, the book critically examines the myriad effects of dominant discourses of wellbeing on the one hand, and the social and cultural dimensions of wellbeing on the other. From diverse methodological and theoretical perspectives, it explores how notions of wellbeing have been mobilized across time and space, in and out of school contexts, and the different inflections and effects of wellbeing discourses are having in education, transnationally and comparatively. The book offers researchers as well as practitioners new perspectives on current approaches to student wellbeing in schools and novel ways of thinking about the wellbeing of young people beyond educational settings.

Rethinking Youth Citizenship After the Age of Entitlement

Rethinking Youth Citizenship After the Age of Entitlement
Title Rethinking Youth Citizenship After the Age of Entitlement PDF eBook
Author Lucas Walsh
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages 233
Release 2018-03-22
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1474248047

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Rethinking Youth Citizenship After the Age of Entitlement provides a primer for exploring hard questions about how young people understand, experience and enact their citizenship in uncertain times and about their senses of membership and belonging. It examines how familiar modes of exclusion are compounded by punitive youth policies in ways that are concealed by neoliberal discourses. It considers the role of key institutions in constructing young people's citizenship and looks at the ways in which some young people are opting out of established enactments of citizenship while creating new ones. Critically reflecting on recent scholarly interest in the geographical, relational, affective and temporal dimensions of young people's experiences of citizenship, it also reinvigorates the discussion about citizenship rights and entitlements, and what these might mean for young people. The book draws on global research and theories of citizenship but has a particular focus on Australia, which provides a unique example of a country that has fared well economically yet is mimicking the austerity measures of the United Kingdom and Europe. It concludes with an argument for a rethinking of citizenship which recognises young people's rights as citizens and the ways in which these interact with their lived experience at a time that has been characterised as 'the end of the age of entitlement'.

Rethinking the Youth Question

Rethinking the Youth Question
Title Rethinking the Youth Question PDF eBook
Author Phil Cohen
Publisher
Total Pages 414
Release 1997
Genre Education
ISBN 9780333631485

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Bringing together essays, research studies and other material written over the past two decades, this book traces through them a history of political and intellectual debates on the left and in cultural studies, around central issues of education, labour and the youth question. An argument is made for linking the cultural, structural and autobiographical dimensions of the youth question in order to engage educationally with the burden of representation which young people are made to carry via race, class and sexuality in the postmodern world. The book includes three major unpublished pieces and an introduction which discusses the nature of the collection, and sets it in both a personal and political context.

Rethinking Gender and Youth Sport

Rethinking Gender and Youth Sport
Title Rethinking Gender and Youth Sport PDF eBook
Author Ian Wellard
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 183
Release 2007-10-16
Genre Education
ISBN 1134128568

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This book highlights the need for students and researchers to recognize a fuller range of social and cultural influences on young people’s experience of sport. Ian Wellard explores issues including: gender, ability, expectations and human rights.

Youth, Education, and the Role of Society

Youth, Education, and the Role of Society
Title Youth, Education, and the Role of Society PDF eBook
Author Robert Halpern
Publisher Work and Learning
Total Pages 0
Release 2013
Genre Education
ISBN 9781612505367

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Examines the "learning landscape" currently available to American adolescents, arguing that we need to expand, enrich, and diversify the learning opportunities available to young people today. Central to the book is Robert Halpern's view that we depend too exclusively on schools to meet the full range of young people's developmental needs.

You Lost Me

You Lost Me
Title You Lost Me PDF eBook
Author David Kinnaman
Publisher Baker Books
Total Pages 256
Release 2011-10-01
Genre Religion
ISBN 1441213082

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Close to 60 percent of young people who went to church as teens drop out after high school. Now the bestselling author of unChristian trains his researcher's eye on these young believers. Where Kinnaman's first book unChristian showed the world what outsiders aged 16-29 think of Christianity, You Lost Me shows why younger Christians aged 16-29 are leaving the church and rethinking their faith. Based on new research, You Lost Me shows pastors, church leaders, and parents how we have failed to equip young people to live "in but not of" the world and how this has serious long-term consequences. More importantly, Kinnaman offers ideas on how to help young people develop and maintain a vibrant faith that they embrace over a lifetime.