2010
DOI: 10.4324/9780203858332
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Lost Youth in the Global City

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Cited by 108 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…By using the term imaginary representation, we are not suggesting that what people remember about being young or representations of young people are imaginary, in that they never existed. Rather, we are interested in how people remember and imagine youth exclusion in both the past and present, and how such memories reveal, in Balibar's (2009aBalibar's ( , 2009b terms, embodied understandings of 'seeing like a border' as well as nostalgic narratives of a lost time (Dillabough and Kennelly 2010;Erikson 2010;McLeod 2012;Wright and McLeod 2012). Putting this differently, we ask: how do memories and representations of youth represent border narratives that stretch across time and place?…”
Section: Border Travel: Intermediary Zones Of Youth Exclusion Across mentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…By using the term imaginary representation, we are not suggesting that what people remember about being young or representations of young people are imaginary, in that they never existed. Rather, we are interested in how people remember and imagine youth exclusion in both the past and present, and how such memories reveal, in Balibar's (2009aBalibar's ( , 2009b terms, embodied understandings of 'seeing like a border' as well as nostalgic narratives of a lost time (Dillabough and Kennelly 2010;Erikson 2010;McLeod 2012;Wright and McLeod 2012). Putting this differently, we ask: how do memories and representations of youth represent border narratives that stretch across time and place?…”
Section: Border Travel: Intermediary Zones Of Youth Exclusion Across mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…These people had extensive experience of living or working in these areas, over periods of around 40 years. Data are also drawn from interviews with young people involved in Dillabough and Kennelly's (2010) ethnographic study in Vancouver. For the Melbourne site, we draw on materials from another strand of research in which the first and second authors were involved, using interview data with social workers and oral history interviews and focus groups conducted with older residents who grew up in the adjacent inner-city areas of Abbotsford and Collingwood, where some of the joint research took place.…”
Section: Border Travel: Intermediary Zones Of Youth Exclusion Across mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Charter schools in the three largest urban areas in the US provide limited access to students from socially, racially, and economically marginalized neighbourhoods (Gulosino & Lubienski, 2011;Lubienski, Gulosino, & Weitzel, 2009). In Canada, recent small-scale qualitative studies have found that educational choices are unequally distributed and that possible futures are unequally constructed in ways that reinforce social class hierarchies; consequently, students at low-performing schools feel stigmatized, invisible, neglected and "warehoused" (Dillabough & Kennelly, 2010;Gaztambide-Fernandez, VanderDussen, & Cairns, 2012). Students in these studies have referred to this as the "ghetto effect" (Dillabough & Kennelly, 2010).…”
Section: List Of Figuresmentioning
confidence: 99%