2014
DOI: 10.1057/ajcs.2014.5
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Saving the child for the sake of the nation: Moral framing and the civic, moral and religious redemption of children

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
2
1

Citation Types

0
30
0

Year Published

2018
2018
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
4
2

Relationship

0
6

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 6 publications
(30 citation statements)
references
References 26 publications
0
30
0
Order By: Relevance
“…How matters of religion and education look from the perspective and experience of children and young people should be a priority area of research. In light of scholarship around the moral meanings given to children and childhood (Lynch, 2014), and the scandals around child abuse in religious contexts (Donnelly, 2017), there is an emerging ethical as well as scholarly imperative to consider how children experience, navigate and respond to the religious, not least in educational contexts (Shillitoe, forthcoming 2020).…”
Section: Children's Rights and Agency In Religion And Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…How matters of religion and education look from the perspective and experience of children and young people should be a priority area of research. In light of scholarship around the moral meanings given to children and childhood (Lynch, 2014), and the scandals around child abuse in religious contexts (Donnelly, 2017), there is an emerging ethical as well as scholarly imperative to consider how children experience, navigate and respond to the religious, not least in educational contexts (Shillitoe, forthcoming 2020).…”
Section: Children's Rights and Agency In Religion And Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Lynch (2014) has demonstrated, child removal policies in Australia and other Western nations through the mid-nineteenth to mid-twentieth centuries were justified as projects of nation-building. Children in these contexts were valued not for themselves or because of the inherent value of childhood, but as future citizens.…”
Section: Child Removal and The Reformatorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was also a necessary preventive measure. Children who were removed were often seen as being in such danger of corruption that they posed a threat to the future of the community (Lynch, 2014: 179). The presence of child-saving and reformatory discourses in Australia arguably contributed to a fixation on Aboriginal children.…”
Section: Child Removal and The Reformatorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fuelled by biological determinism and eugenics, the assumption was that a child's moral character was irretrievably shaped by heredity, resulting in child migrants being condemned as degenerate 'slum kids' (Buss, 1976;Partridge, 1912;Stewart, 2009). Between these positions was a tentative construction of some children as 'capable' and 'resilient', namely those who showed strength of character and an ability to change (Lynch, 2014;Parr, 1982). Yet other coping mechanisms, such as resistance to emigration and running away, were blamed on their upbringing and hereditary tendencies, leading to them being classed as 'troublesome' and hard to manage and placing them in the 'undeserving' category (Moss, Wildman, and Lamont, 2020;Sims-Schouten, 2020;Sims-Schouten, Skinner, and Rivett, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While some writings highlight the altruistic motives of the voluntary agencies that sent children abroadin her book on the 'Middlemore Experience', for instance, Roberts-Pichette (2016) constructs the child migration scheme in terms of an initiative that helped vulnerable children thrivecases of abuse and neglect have also been widely reported in relation to the Canadian (as well as the Australian) child migration schemes (see Constantine, 1991;Independent Inquiry Into Child Sexual Abuse, 2018;Lynch, 2014). The selection process associated with UK child migration schemes to Canada located the child within a framework of both morality (i.e.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%