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Thinking Today’s Adolescents’ Citizenship through Social Justice Lens: Why and How?
Lugar de publicación | Año de publicación | compilación: 
Québec | 2018 | p. 52–68
ISBN/ISSN: 
ISSN 1703-9665 (numérique)
Autor: 
Caroline Caron
Autor corporativo: 
Lien social et Politiques
Región: 
Europa y América del Norte
Global

How do we know what we know about youth citizenship ? This epistemological question has been neglected in the field of youth citizenship and public discourses on youth political apathy. This article draws on the theoretical perspective of social justice studies to unmask the relations of power based on age that have shaped current knowledge about youth citizenship. The analysis draws attention to the epistemic injustices and methodological flaws in the specific field of civic literacy in Canada. It is argued that a difference-centered approach to youth citizenship could help foster a better understanding of youth experiences of civic engagement and political participation. Yet, this potentiel can only be achieved through a self-reflexive inquiry that critically investigates the research process itself in current research trends. Although a dominant approach in the study of civic literacy is limited in its capacity to produce knowledge that is socially just towards adolescents, the concept could be reinvigorated through a critical empirically-grounded examination of youth civic competencies that are evidenced in some of their engagments with new media technologies. Yet, to fulfill this goal also requires that scholars engage in crucial debates about their chosen epistemology and theory of democracy.

Archivos: 
Tipo de recurso: 
Instrumentos normativos internacionales / documentos de política y promoción
Documentos de investigación / artículos de revistas
Tema: 
Cívico / ciudadanía / democracia
Diversidad / alfabetización cultural / inclusiva
Nivel de educación: 
Educación Secundaria