Youthsites

Youthsites
Title Youthsites PDF eBook
Author Heather Fitzsimmons Frey
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 273
Release 2023
Genre Alternative education
ISBN 0197555497

Download Youthsites Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book is an original study of the youth organizations in London, Toronto, and Vancouver that offer creative and arts programs mainly to youth from diverse and socially marginalized backgrounds. It describes a sector that is often not recognized, organizations that don't like being institutionalized, forms of education that exist outside the mainstream, types of aesthetic expression that often go unrecognized, and unusual learning and cultural opportunities for socially marginalized young people. Rooted in the history of community arts movements from the 1970s, Youthsites, or the non-formal youth arts learning sector, is now part of cities around the world. Technological change, shifts in educational discourses, changes in policy rhetorics, including a turn away from traditional public institutions and a decline in funding of formal public schooling have all impacted the growth of youth arts organizations. Yet there are to date no systematic studies of the history, structure, and development of this sector. Youthsites: Histories of Creativity, Care, and Learning in the City fills this gap and is the first book to develop an internationally comparative, evidence-based, structural analysis of the development of the youth arts sector. Based on an original 4-year study examining the history, priorities, and tensions within this sector between 1995 and 2015, Youthsites explores the organizations and people who are helping young people to become creators, citizens, or just themselves in times of austerity, crisis, and change. This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license. It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations.

Young Citizens in the Digital Age

Young Citizens in the Digital Age
Title Young Citizens in the Digital Age PDF eBook
Author Brian D. Loader
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 257
Release 2007-08-07
Genre Medical
ISBN 1134131569

Download Young Citizens in the Digital Age Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

A social anxiety currently pervades the political classes of the western world, arising from the perception that young people have become disaffected with liberal democratic politics. Voter turnout among 18-25 year olds continues to be lower than other age groups and they are less likely to join political parties. This is not, however, proof that young people are not interested in politics per se but is evidence that they are becoming politically socialized within a new media environment. This shift poses a significant challenge to politicians who increasingly have to respond to a technologically mediated lifestyle politics that celebrates lifestyle diversity, personal disclosure and celebrity. This book explores alternative approaches for engaging and understanding young people’s political activity and looks at the adoption of information and ICTs as a means to facilitate the active engagement of young people in democratic societies. Young Citizens in a Digital Age presents new research and the first comprehensive analysis of ICTs, citizenship and young people from an international group of leading scholars. It is an important book for students and researchers of citizenship and ICTs within the fields of sociology, politics, social policy and communication studies among others.

Reinvesting in America's Youth

Reinvesting in America's Youth
Title Reinvesting in America's Youth PDF eBook
Author Hilda L. Solis
Publisher
Total Pages 152
Release 2010
Genre Occupational training
ISBN

Download Reinvesting in America's Youth Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Compilation of Reports on the 1978 Summer Youth Employment Program

Compilation of Reports on the 1978 Summer Youth Employment Program
Title Compilation of Reports on the 1978 Summer Youth Employment Program PDF eBook
Author United States. Employment and Training Administration. Office of Youth Programs
Publisher
Total Pages 528
Release 1979
Genre Summer employment
ISBN

Download Compilation of Reports on the 1978 Summer Youth Employment Program Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Youth Dialogues on Race and Ethnicity

Youth Dialogues on Race and Ethnicity
Title Youth Dialogues on Race and Ethnicity PDF eBook
Author Barry Checkoway
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 185
Release 2024-02-27
Genre Education
ISBN 0197506860

Download Youth Dialogues on Race and Ethnicity Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

In Youth Dialogues on Race and Ethnicity, Barry Checkoway describes the work of a specific university-community partnership program: Youth Dialogues on Race and Ethnicity in Metropolitan Detroit. Including an analysis of the program's origins and objectives, activities and accomplishments, facilitating and limiting factors, and lessons learned from practice, Checkoway provides an unprecedented example of young people working together across segregated boundaries to transform their lives and communities. He also examines youth dialogues as a process, young people as change agents, adults as allies and partners, and the anchor institutions that support this work.

Youth, Media and Culture in the Asia Pacific Region

Youth, Media and Culture in the Asia Pacific Region
Title Youth, Media and Culture in the Asia Pacific Region PDF eBook
Author Usha M. Rodrigues
Publisher Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages 266
Release 2009-05-05
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1443810398

Download Youth, Media and Culture in the Asia Pacific Region Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Youth, Media and Culture in the Asia Pacific Region presents an analysis of youth media activities in a diverse, but geographically connected Asia Pacific region. The region, which is spatially connected by its colonial and imperial past, is becoming a significant player in the globalized world. In this context, youth situated in these economically, politically and socially structured communities are redefining their locales through their patterns of media use. The discourse of ‘youth’ in this disparate region is manifest in the media through their identity articulations and social activism. The book illustrates that these ‘youth subcultures’ in the Asia Pacific are part of the well marketed global consumerism culture, and yet at other times independent of the commodifying impetus of global capital. It draws on case studies to examine some of the media practices youth in the region are engaged in and elucidates the process of social change taking place in some Asia Pacific nations. 'This book contributes to the important and growing field of youth media studies. The regionalization of media research is necessarily recuperated here, bringing large populations of media users into a frame of reference that allows critical reflection on the new waves of use and sociality in the Asia Pacific region.' Stephanie Hemelryk Donald, Professor of International Studies, UTS

Ageism in Youth Studies

Ageism in Youth Studies
Title Ageism in Youth Studies PDF eBook
Author Gayle Kimball
Publisher Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages 235
Release 2017-05-11
Genre Social Science
ISBN 144389155X

Download Ageism in Youth Studies Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Ageism is prevalent in a great deal of current scholarship in the social sciences as scholars fault youth for being delinquent or politically apathetic. Researchers ignore young people’s actual voices, despite their leadership in recent global uprisings, some of which unseated entrenched dictators. Neoliberalism must be exposed in its focus on youth sub-cultures and styles rather than economic barriers caused by growing inequality and rising youth unemployment rates. Ageism in Youth Studies also discusses the debate about “Generation We or Me” and if Millennials are narcissistic. Resources about global youth studies are included, along with the results of the author’s surveys and interviews with over 4,000 young people from 88 countries.