CFP: Children, Young People and Families in Changing Urban Spaces

 CHILDREN, YOUNG PEOPLE AND FAMILIES IN CHANGING URBAN SPACES 

3rd and 4th September 2014

Centre for Children and Youth

University of Northampton, UK

 Organising committee:

John Horton, Faith Tucker, Sophie Hadfield-Hill (University of Birmingham), Michelle Pyer, Rebekah Ryder

Keynote speaker:

Tracey Skelton (National University of Singapore)

Themes:

This conference will bring together new, multidisciplinary research exploring the lives, issues and experiences of children, young people and families in diverse, international urban contexts. In three senses, we propose that it is timely for researchers, policy-makers and practitioners with an interest in this field to share experiences of working in changing urban contexts.

First, so many urban spaces are undergoing profound changes as a result of interconnected political-economic processes, such as economic crisis and austerity politics in the global north, or uneven development and large-scale urbanisation in the global south. This conference will bring together researchers and perspectives at the vanguard of these transformations.

Second, there is evidence that children, young people and families are positioned, and socially constructed, in diverse and sometimes unprecedented ways in changing urban contexts. In wide-ranging research on participation, activisms, political movements, play or independent mobilities, for example, it is evident that changing urban spaces may afford new opportunities or new limits to the agency of children, young people and families. This conference offers an opportunity for diverse research, from diverse locations, to be discussed.

Third, research on urban children, young people and families is itself changing. As a number of publications and collections have made clear, interdisciplinary collaboration and conversations are increasingly commonplace. For example, new insights have resulted from collaborations between: researchers in urban studies, childhood studies and children’s geographies; researchers, young people and youth workers; quantitative, qualitative and GIS/GPS-based research; academic researchers, planners, policy-makers and practitioners; or social scientists and the creative industries. Research on childhood, youth, families and urbanity has also been enlivened and extended through engagements with conceptualisations of the social-material and bodily-emotional-affective nature of identities, relationships and urban built environments and social-cultural geographies. There are surely numerous exciting ways in which researchers from diverse backgrounds might continue to collaborate.

With all this in mind, we invite papers which engage with children and young people in relation to the following topics:

  • Economic crisis and austerity politics;
  • Designing environments for children, young people and families;
  • Movement and mobilities;
  • Urbanisation and economic development in the global south;
  • Play and popular culture;
  • Disabilities, health and wellbeing;
  • Identities, subcultures and friendships;
  • Exclusions, vulnerability, support and care;
  • Innovative concepts and research methods in urban research;
  • Work and economic participation;
  • Social media and digital technologies in the city;
  • Policing, control and surveillance;
  • Urban play, identities, subcultures and popular culture;
  • Built environments and public spaces;
  • Participation, activism and citizenship.

Abstracts (c.200 words) should be emailed to: faith.tucker@northampton.ac.uk by 16thApril 2014.

Conference information:

Information about registration for the conference will be available in due course.  The standard fee for this two-day conference will be £125; postgraduate fee £65.  (Additional charge for overnight accommodation.)

For further information, please contact Dr Faith Tucker (email:faith.tucker@northampton.ac.uk ).

CFP: Child Studies in Asia-Pacific Contexts

CALL FOR PAPERS:

Child Studies in Asia-Pacific Contexts

ISSN: 2288-601X

www.e-csac.org

 Child Studies in Asia-Pacific Contexts (CSAC) is a multidisciplinary international journal that publishes papers on children’s development in diverse social and cultural contexts in Asia Pacific region. CSAC’s paramount aim is to examine biological, emotional, cognitive, social, and cultural development of children; the role of social and cultural contexts, such as family, educare setting, school, and community, in children’s development; the interaction between development and context; and its theoretical and practical implications, including social policies for children.

We publish in February and August and are now accepting papers for publication in the 2014 August issue.

The submission deadline for publication in the August issue is June 1, 2014.

To submit, please visit our homepage at www.e-csac.org

————————

Editorial Board: http://www.e-csac.org/html/sub02_01.asp

CHIEF EDITOR

Soon Hyung Yi, Seoul National University, Korea

EDITORIAL BOARDS

Catherine McBride-Chang, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

Feng-Ming Tsao, National Taiwan University, Taiwan

Gisela Trommsdorff, Universitat Konstanz, Germany

Ingrid Schoon, University of London, United Kingdom

Jean Phinney, California State University at Los Angeles, USA

Joseph Tobin, Arizona State University, USA

Judi Mesman, Leiden University, Netherlands

Jung-Sook Lee, University of New South Wales, Australia

Katariina Salmela-Aro, University of Helsinki, Finland

Kenneth H. Rubin, University of Maryland, USA

Leher Singh, National University of Singapore, Singapore

Marc H. Bornstein, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, USA

Masako Ishii-Kuntz, Ochanomizu University, Japan

Min Ju Kang, Yonsei University, Korea

Mutsumi Imai, Keio University, Japan

Myoung Soon Kim, Yonsei University, Korea

Paul E. Jose, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand

Robert E. Emery, University of Virginia, USA

Sara Harkness, University of Connecticut, USA

Sing Lau, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong

Yanjie Su, Peking University, China

MANAGING EDITOR

Grace Chung, Seoul National University, USA

——————-

Important Features of CSAC:

Committed to SPEEDY review and publication

One of the most important features of CSAC is speedy review and rapid publication.

For all submitted manuscripts, we strive to complete the first round review within 3 weeks

and publish and accepted manuscript within 6 months of initial submission.

——————-

Authors’ Guidelines: http://www.e-csac.org/html/sub03_01.asp

+ All manuscripts must be prepared in English.

+ Review paper is warmly welcome.

+ Submit your paper through the CSAC website: www.e-csac.org

+ To expedite the review process, please format your reference as the guideline.

+ Please visit journal homepage for more information and to view our issues.

Best Regards,

Editorial Office of CSAC

www.e-csac.org

Email: email.csac@gmail.com

 

WHERE NOW FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE? THE MARGINALISATION OF YOUNG PEOPLE IN THE UK

Thursday 12th ­ Friday 13th June 2014

Closing date for submissions is 14th March 2014

We are inviting abstracts for a two day Conference held at Canterbury Christ
Church University, Canterbury, Kent, UK.

We are seeking papers which challenge the dominant ideologies and notions of
social justice that are driving current changes in social and educational
policy. We are particularly interested in papers which explore social
justice in relation to children and marginalised young people, including
those from education, health and social care, social policy, housing,
sociology and criminology disciplines. We are also interested in papers
exploring innovative research methods with children and young people. Issues
for papers include:

€ Impact of poverty and inequality on children and young people

€ Marginalisation of children and young people

€ Use of innovative research methods

€ Role of education in reproducing inequality

€ Pedagogies of inclusion in schools and universities

€ Diverse identities of children and young people, including:

€ Gender

€ Sexuality

€ Ethnicity

€ Children in care

Proposals of 300 words are invited for consideration for 20 minute papers
(followed by 10 minutes for questions and discussion). Please submit
abstracts to: Charmian Cowie: charmian.cowie@canterbury.ac.uk

For further information, contact Ruth Rogers at ruth.rogers@canterbury.ac.uk
or 01227 782099

Closing date for submissions: Friday 14th March 2014

http://www.canterbury.ac.uk/education/conferences-events/Home.aspx

CFP: Young People’sMigration Within and Throughout Asia

Call for Papers: Young People’s Migration Within and Throughout Asia
*International Workshop Series: The Emotions of Migration*

*Workshop 2
Young People¹s Migration Within and Throughout Asia: Managing Emotions,
Identities and Relationships *

Date: 19 August 2014 to 20 August 2014

York Centre for Asian Research and the Children¹s Studies Program
(Department of Humanities) York University, Toronto Canada

*Call for papers*: Workshop 2 calls for empirical research papers ­
historical and contemporary- on children and young people¹s emotional
experiences of migration within and throughout Asia. Papers should focus on
mixed feelings of (but not limited to) elation, loneliness, hope,
frustration, confusion, relief, fear, freedom and disappointment in the
migration process.

There is a preference for participant-centred research in South and
Southeast Asia prioritizing the following themes:

1. Migration for work and marriage in a historical context (especially
in plantations and estates)
2. Contemporary experiences of moving for work, marriage and school ­
managing mixed feelings
3. Left Behind ­ adjusting to absence and creating and maintaining
relationships

*Submission and Funding: *Please submit contact details and paper abstract
(maximum of 300 words) by*April 4th 2014 to *Dr. Kabita
Chakrabortrykabitac@yorku.ca <mailto:kabitac@yorku.ca>.

Successful applicants will be notified by late-April and are required to
send in a complete draft paper (6000 ­ 8000 words) by July 8, 2014. Partial
or full funding will be granted to successful applicants. Participants are
encouraged to seek alternate funds for travel from their home institutions

*Webpage*:
http://ycar.apps01.yorku.ca/research/programmes-projects/emotions-migration-
asia/

Children and the City Conference

Children and the City

The 5th Annual Conference of the Program for the Master Degree in the Research of Child and Youth Culture with The Sha’ar Zion – Beit Ariela  Municipal Library

March 25th, 13:00-18:30 Tel Aviv University

From Athens to the White City: A History of Urban Childhood

March 26th, 13:00-18:45

Childhood and Youth in Urban Culture

The Program for the Master Degree in the Research of Child and Youth Culture and the Sha’ar Zion – Beit Ariela Municipal Library cordially invite the public to a two day conference titled Children and the City. The first day of the conference will explore the history of urban childhoods, from Athens through Victorian London to 20th century Tel Aviv. The second day will provide a panoramic picture of childhoods in contemporary Tel Aviv, as a case study for modern urban childhoods.

*the conference will be conducted in Hebrew*

For further details and full program: http://tinyurl.com/nm35xbs

New ways to research childhood: Research ethics and critical realism

Please join us for the final seminar in the series: Childhood, rights, research ethics and critical realism: New ways to research childhood with Priscilla Alderson, Professor Emerita of Childhood Studies, Institute of Education:

New ways to research childhood: Research ethics and critical realism

Thursday 13th March, 5.30-7.30, Room 736, IOE, 20 Bedford Way, London

Are justice, respect and avoiding harm universal concepts, or are they simply local ideas that vary in time and place? How can critical realist concepts of being and knowing, and of the four planes of social being, inform research ethics and how they are applied? How do ethics in natural science and in social science research overlap or differ?

To register and for more information contact Rachel Rosen: r.rosen@ioe.ac.uk.
For more information about the MA Sociology of Childhood and Children’s Rights:http://www.ioe.ac.uk/study/PMA9_CHD91M.html

CFP: AAA Panel on Youth and Social Change

Dear ACYIG colleagues,

We are organizing a panel for this year’s AAA meeting in December in Washington, DC. A tentative title is “Unsettling the Trope of Change: Negotiations with ‘Tradition’ among Contemporary Youth.” Papers on this panel will draw on research with youth (broadly defined) to  unsettle the common dichotomy between change and tradition.

Here we provide a sense of our motivation for this panel, but please excuse the unfinished nature of this description — we thought it would be better to not delay any longer in soliciting interest among ACYIG members.

In our research (Bonnie’s in India, Mindy’s in Mexico and the US), we both work with youth and teens who are generally the first generation in their families to attend school and to plan for (or are currently in) higher education. They have grown up with the goal of producing very different adult identities within society than those of their parents. However, we continue to see unexpected continuitieswith “traditional culture”that do not fit with a Euro-American model of individualization in Late Modernity. We see them often prioritize their family roles and maintain a strong sense of familism, despite simultaneously aiming for such modern economic identities that in the West link to the loss of familism.
While we tend to situate our own research within a context of social change, we realize that we need to unsettle this anthropological trope to enable a more nuanced understanding of growing up, in order to theorize how young people embrace these seemingly conflicting local and global ideals for personhood.

Please let us know as soon as possible if you are interested in joining our panel (email: brichard@ucla.edu). We will need abstracts by the end of March, but need to hear from you soon if you are thinking about submitting with us so that we can plan accordingly.

Thank you for your interest!

Bonnie Richard (UCLA) & Mindy Steinberg (UCLA

 

Seminar – Children’s Rights in the Netherlands


It is our pleasure to invite you to the Anthropology of Children and Youth Seminar.
 
The seminar is on Friday 14 March , 10.30-12.00, room Z-113:

A review of early-years childcare services aiming to explore the state of
Children’s Rights in the Netherlands
 
 
Olga Middendorp,
Alumna Institute of Education, University of London

 

Please find enclosed the poster of this meeting, as well as information on the venue. 

VU University is located at a 10-minutes’ walk from Amsterdam Zuid railway station. The Metropolitan Building is located opposite the University’s main building, across the tramway. Tram stop ‘De Boelelaan / VU’ is served by tram lines 5 and 51.
 
Feel free to communicate information of this seminar to other people who might be interested. 
Could you confirm your participation in the 14 March seminar to us?
 
We are looking forward to an inspiring meeting!