Read Anywhere and on Any Device!

Subscribe to Read | $0.00

Join today and start reading your favorite books for Free!

Read Anywhere and on Any Device!

  • Download on iOS
  • Download on Android
  • Download on iOS

Children's Rights and Power (Children in Charge Series #9): Charging Up for a New Century

Children's Rights and Power (Children in Charge Series #9): Charging Up for a New Century

Mary John
0/5 ( ratings)
Why have children been excluded from discussions of the changing nature of power, and why are they invisible in national and international statistics? Taking a global perspective, Mary John considers how children learn about power, being powerful and the transformation of power relationships. She compares the situation of children to that of other powerless minority groups, "silenced" because of their lack of economic force and argues that children are rarely included in debates on social accountability, freedom, and autonomy.In Children's Rights and Power in a Changing World, Mary John examines children in relation to current thinking about the nature of power, the role of competence within this, and how perception of power is determined by culture. As part of her field research she has studied and visited the night schools of Rajastan ; the rise in violence among Japanese school children; child labor in Mexico; and democratic schooling in Albany, NY, USA. She argues that democracies are not only sought in the public sphere, they are created within the emotional intimacies of private social worlds. These worlds present the child with new challenges for the recognition and realization of their rightful autonomy and agency.
Pages
304
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Kingsley, Jessica Publishers
Release
April 01, 2003
ISBN
1853026581
ISBN 13
9781853026584

Children's Rights and Power (Children in Charge Series #9): Charging Up for a New Century

Mary John
0/5 ( ratings)
Why have children been excluded from discussions of the changing nature of power, and why are they invisible in national and international statistics? Taking a global perspective, Mary John considers how children learn about power, being powerful and the transformation of power relationships. She compares the situation of children to that of other powerless minority groups, "silenced" because of their lack of economic force and argues that children are rarely included in debates on social accountability, freedom, and autonomy.In Children's Rights and Power in a Changing World, Mary John examines children in relation to current thinking about the nature of power, the role of competence within this, and how perception of power is determined by culture. As part of her field research she has studied and visited the night schools of Rajastan ; the rise in violence among Japanese school children; child labor in Mexico; and democratic schooling in Albany, NY, USA. She argues that democracies are not only sought in the public sphere, they are created within the emotional intimacies of private social worlds. These worlds present the child with new challenges for the recognition and realization of their rightful autonomy and agency.
Pages
304
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Kingsley, Jessica Publishers
Release
April 01, 2003
ISBN
1853026581
ISBN 13
9781853026584

Rate this book!

Write a review?

loader