Young People, Rights and Place Erasure, Neoliberal Politics and Postchild Ethics

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Synopsis

Concern is growing about children’s rights and the curtailment of those rights through the excesses of neoliberal governance. This book discusses children’s spatial and citizenship rights, and the ways young people and their families push against diminished rights.

Armed initially with theoretical concerns about the construction of children through the political status quo and the ways youth rights are spatially segregated, the book begins with a disarmingly simple supposition: Young people have the right to make and remake their spaces and, as a consequence, themselves. This book de-centers monadic ideas of children in favor of a post-humanist perspective, which embraces the radical relationality of children as more-than-children/more-than-human. Its empirical focus begins with the struggles of Slovenian Izbrisani (‘erased’) youth from 1992 to the present day and reaches out to child rights and youth activists elsewhere in the world with examples from South America, Eastern Europe and the USA. The author argues that universal child rights have not worked and pushes for a more radical, sustainable ethics, which dares to admit that children’s humanity is something more than we, as adults, can imagine.

Chapters in this groundbreaking contribution will be of interest to students, researchers and practitioners in the social sciences, humanities and public policy.

 

Book details

Series:
Routledge Spaces of Childhood and Youth Series
Author:
Stuart C. Aitken
ISBN:
9781315519234
Related ISBNs:
9781315519258, 9781138697720, 9781138697720
Publisher:
Taylor and Francis
Pages:
N/A
Reading age:
Not specified
Includes images:
Yes
Date of addition:
2020-02-26
Usage restrictions:
Copyright
Copyright date:
2018
Copyright by:
Stuart C. Aitken 
Adult content:
No
Language:
English
Categories:
Earth Sciences, Nonfiction, Social Studies