ABSTRACT

Children's Places examines the ways in which children and adults, from their different vantage-points in society, negotiate the 'proper place' of children in both social and spatial terms. It looks at some of the recognised constructions of children, including perspectives from cultures that do not distinguish children as a distinct category of people, as well as examining contexts for them, from schools and kindergartens to inner cities and war-zones. The result is a much-needed insight into the notions of inclusion and exclusion, the placement and displacement of children within generational ranks and orders, and the kinds of places that children construct for themselves.
Based on in-depth ethnographic research from Europe, Asia, Africa, North America, Australia and New Zealand.

part I|76 pages

Place as a site of opportunity and control

chapter Chapter 1|16 pages

Creating a natural place for children

An ethnographic study of Danish kindergartens

chapter Chapter 2|19 pages

Restricted experiences in a conflict society

The local lives of Belfast children

chapter Chapter 3|19 pages

The Smith children go out to school — and come home again

Place-making among Kuku-Yalanji children in Southeast Cape York, Australia

chapter Chapter 4|20 pages

How will the children come home?

Emplacement and the creation of the social body in an Ethiopian returnee settlement

part II|80 pages

Place as a site in the field of generational relations

chapter Chapter 5|20 pages

Growing up between places of work and non-places of childhood

The uneasy relationship

chapter Chapter 6|19 pages

Common neighbourhoods—diversified lives

Growing up in urban Norway

chapter Chapter 7|23 pages

Associationless children

Inner-city sports and local society in Denmark

chapter Chapter 8|15 pages

Changing place, changing position

Orphans' movements in a community with high HIV/AIDS prevalence in western Kenya

part III|70 pages

Place as a source of belonging

chapter Chapter 9|18 pages

Sweet and bitter places

The politics of schoolchildren's orientation in rural Uganda

chapter Chapter 10|20 pages

‘Imagined communities'

The local community as a place for ‘children's culture' and social participation in Norway

chapter Chapter 12|11 pages

Epilogue

Children's places