Children's Public Participation,Middle‐Class Families and Emotions |
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Authors: | Johanna Kiili |
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Affiliation: | Department of Social Sciences and Philosophy, University of Jyv?skyl?, Jyv?skyl?, Finland |
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Abstract: | The article examines the activities of a municipal children's parliament (the TCP) in a middle‐sized Finnish town. The article focuses on members of the TCP board and their parents and the emphasis is on parents' views as very little research exists on family background in relation to children's public participation. All the participating families were middle‐class, both as self‐defined and according to their socioeconomic background. The parents studied detailed different emotions they and their children experienced as members of the children's parliament. The article illustrates that being a middle‐class child and participating in civic activities is not an uncomplicated description of privilege. Children and parents engaged in the TCP board displayed three distinct strategies, to interpret and support engagement in the structure; as hobbyists, school‐oriented or ambivalently engaged. They had to cope with feelings of pressure and stress over workload and the conflict between having peer‐related problems in school versus the future civic competencies and advantages held out to TCP office holders. The article extends the understanding of participation to include discussion of social class and emotions and calls for further research on these themes. |
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Keywords: | children's public participation middle‐class families cultural resources emotions |
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