Title of article :
“Do you guys hate Aucklanders too?” Youth: voicing difference from the rural heartland
Author/Authors :
Linda Tuhiwai Smith، نويسنده , , Graham H. Smith، نويسنده , , Megan Boler، نويسنده , , Margaret Kempton، نويسنده , , Adreanne Ormond، نويسنده , , Ho-Chia Chueh، نويسنده , , Rona Waetford، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages :
10
From page :
169
To page :
178
Abstract :
This paper extends recent work in the geography of childhood and youth studies by examining the ways in which rural youth voice their understandings of what it means to be a young person at this historic moment (the end of the twentieth century) in New Zealand. Youth First1 has been a nationwide project which has sought to privilege what young people 10–17 years say as a basis for evaluating the last 15 years of economic and cultural change in New Zealand. Over the course of 3 years a methodology was used to constitute spaces where youth voices would be heard. Focus Groups and “Youth Tribunals” have been conducted across New Zealand involving young people from diverse social and ethnic backgrounds. This methodology was supported by a development programme for beginning researchers also from diverse backgrounds and disciplines, and by the significant participation by young people in the design and conduct of the “Youth Tribunals”. Their participation has been critical to the power of the methodology to constitute spaces where rural youth have provided rich testimonies about their complex lives. While the voices of rural youth in the study resonate with national youth themes, including the theme of “not being listened to” they also speak to the nuances and differences in the lives of rural New Zealand youth. We would argue that in sharp contrast to the organizing concept of one “rural childhood” our research clearly shows that there are different possibilities in growing up rural. Maori and Pakeha2 youth for example draw on different cultural and linguistic resources to voice their relationships to place and identity. Although vehemently clear about the ways in which they were excluded from participation in community life and their strategies of resistance, rural youth in this study also provided analyses which showed their commitment to positive possibilities which they saw as part of rural lives and communities.
Journal title :
Journal of Rural Studies
Serial Year :
2002
Journal title :
Journal of Rural Studies
Record number :
744869
Link To Document :
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