La Trobe

Activism, rights and hope: Young people and their advocates mobilising for social change

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posted on 2025-03-18, 23:12 authored by Katie WrightKatie Wright, Julie McLeod
This opening chapter of the edited volume, Childhood, Youth and Activism: Demands for Rights and Justice from Young People and Their Advocates, explores activism and advocacy – by and for children and young people. It begins by considering how activism has been understood in the scholarly literature, before making a case for a broad and inclusive conceptualisation of what counts as this particular form of social action. Relatedly, it examines the contours of the relationship between activism and advocacy, drawing attention to the ways in which these concepts converge, an issue that is particularly salient when applied to the categories of child and youth. Themes that emerge in research on child and youth activism are then drawn out and we identify some of the key issues that animate this work across various disciplines. These include observations that young people have long been central to social movements, the role of social media in youth activism, the nature of child and adult relationships in social movement organisations, and some of the issues that arise for young activists in relation to intersectional identities. To this we add debates regarding the politics of recognition, questions of voice and agency,

Funding

Reclaiming Child Rights: Activism, Public Inquiries and Social Change

Australian Research Council

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Progressive education and race: A transnational Australian history 1920-50s

Australian Research Council

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History

Publication Date

2024-12-14

Book Title

Childhood, Youth and Activism: Demands for Rights and Justice from Young People and their Advocates

Editors

Wright K McLeod J

Publisher

Emerald

Place of publication

Leeds, UK

Series

Sociological Studies of Children and Youth

Volume

33

Pagination

18p. (p. 1-18)

ISBN-13

978-1-80117-469-5

Rights Statement

© 2024 by Katie Wright and Julie McLeod. This author accepted manuscript is deposited under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC) licence. This means that anyone may distribute, adapt, and build upon the work for non-commercial purposes, subject to full attribution. If you wish to use this manuscript for commercial purposes, please contact permissions@emerald.com.

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