âA fascinating, rigorous and wide-ranging exploration of the concept of âbelongingâ with respect to young peopleâs lives. It brings together scholarship from across the globe to consider how ideas about belonging impact our understandings of transitions, participation, citizenship and mobilities. An important and authoritative new text for youth researchers, written by three key scholars in the field.ââRachel Brooks, Professor, University of Surrey, UKâAn incisive interrogation of âbelongingâ as an idea and as a framing device. It shows that, as productive as âbelongingâ has been across youth studies, it is poorly theorised. It offers a genealogy of uses of belonging and a systematic unpacking of its limitations and possibilities. It illustrates insightfully that in a mobile, global world we need a relational and dynamic understanding of the many faces of belonging.ââGreg Noble, Professor, Western Sydney University, AustraliaâThis book is a game changer for youth studies. Offering a new and long overdue take on the turn to belonging in youth policy and research, it interrogates ideas about young people and relationality and how these are deployed particularly in settler-colonial nations. It opens up exciting new spaces for understanding how young people consider and enact connectedness in difficult times. This is an important must-read analysis from a team of leading youth studies scholars.ââJoanna Kidman, Professor of MÄori Education, Victoria University of Wellington, New ZealandâThis groundbreaking book is a must read for anyone interested in Youth Studies. Written by three world leading scholars it not only offers new insights into the recent âturnâ towards belonging, drawing upon a historical and a global analysis, but also introduces new ways of conceptualising young peopleâs lives today. One of its unique and pleasing features is its engagement with indigenous ideas and alternative world views illustrating the important contribution they can and do make to these debates.ââAlan France, Professor of Sociology, University of Auckland, New ZealandâIn this thoughtful and original book, acclaimed youth studies researchers Johanna Wyn, Anita Harris and Hernan Cuervo turn a critical eye on the idea of belonging. They demonstrate how belonging, as a concept, as practice and as ways of being, can be used to illuminate the complexities of young peopleâs lives. It is indispensable reading for anyone wanting to understand how young people study, work and play in families, schools, communities and nation-states in late modernity. ââJudith Bessant, Professor, Schools of Global, Urban & Social Studies, RMIT University, AustraliaâThis innovative book thoroughly and critically addresses a compelling question circulating among youth researches today: do we really need the concept of belonging to understandyoung peopleâs new life experiences? And why? As the volume highlights, using empirical examples, for young people the notion of belonging is intertwined with that of becoming. The authors unveil the reasons for this, offering a critical and expert view on the potential and limits of the concept.â âCarmen Leccardi, Department of Sociology and Social Research, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy
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