Young people's emotional geographies of citizenship participation: Spatial and relational insights |
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Affiliation: | Faculty of Education, Victoria University of Wellington, PO Box 17-310, Karori Campus, Wellington 6147, New Zealand;Tampere University, Finland;Ohio State University, United States;Bartlett School of Planning, UCL, UK;Sheffield Hallam University, Charles Street, Sheffield, S1 2NH, United Kingdom;Department of Liver Transplantation and Hepatobiliary Surgery, Ajou University School of Medicine, Suwon, Korea;Space and Political Agency Research Group, School of Management, FI33014 University of Tampere, Finland |
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Abstract: | The inclusion of more ‘active’ citizenship concepts within citizenship curricula has been a pattern noted in many countries in recent years. Yet, rarely are young people's citizenship identities, and how these are shaped by emotional and relational experiences of being citizens in communities, considered in such curricula. In this paper, I explore the citizenship narratives of young people from two New Zealand high schools and examine how emotions formed a significant aspect of their citizenship perceptions and participation. These emotions were constituted in and through relations and non-relations with other young people at school, as well as with members of their local communities at various inter-locking spatial scales. Focusing on emotional geographies of citizenship participation offered insights into how young people were forming their citizenship identities at the intersection of their geographies of gender, race and class, and how these experiences shaped, motivated and sustained citizenship participation. The study highlights the complexity of young people's emotional experiences in relation to their citizenship identities and participation and the need to understand this affectivity in greater depth, especially within policy contexts. |
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