What’s the Problem? Precarious Youth: Marginalisation, Criminalisation and Racialisation.


Autoria(s): Clarke, John
Data(s)

08/01/2009

08/01/2009

Resumo

Since the nineteenth century invention of adolescence, young people have been consistently identified as social problems in western societies. Their contemporary status as a focus of fear and anxiety is, in that sense, nothing new. In this paper, I try to combine this sense of historical recurrence about the youth problem with some questions about what is different about the present – asking what is distinctive about the shape of the youth problem now? This is a difficult balance to strike, and what I have to say will probably lean more towards an emphasis on the historical conditions and routes of the youth problem. That balance reflects my own orientations and knowledge (I am not expert on the contemporary conditions of being young). But it also arises from my belief that much contemporary social science is profoundly forgetful. An enthusiasm for stressing the newness, or novelty, of the present connects many varieties of contemporary scholarship. One result is the construction of what Janet Fink and I have referred to as ‘sociological time’ in which

Identificador

urn:nbn:de:0009-11-17011

http://www.socwork.net/2008/2/special_issue/clarke

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

DPPL

Fonte

Social Work & Society ; 6 , 2

Palavras-Chave #Precarious Youth #Marginalisation #Criminalisation #Racialisation