Young people, youth work and social justice: a participatory parity perspective
dc.contributor.advisor
Fyfe, Ian
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dc.contributor.advisor
Crowther, Jim
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dc.contributor.author
Mackie, Alan
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dc.contributor.sponsor
Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
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dc.date.accessioned
2019-09-20T09:49:25Z
dc.date.available
2019-09-20T09:49:25Z
dc.date.issued
2019-11-28
dc.description.abstract
This thesis explores issues of social injustice impacting on a sample group of young
people living in a Scottish community and critically examines their experiences on the
periphery of the labour market. Existing research evidence has highlighted myriad
issues impacting on young people as they struggle to make the transition to adulthood.
Young people in the UK have been particularly impacted by the economic turbulence of
recent years with stagnating wages, higher rates of unemployment compared to older
age groups, an increase in precarious employment and a gradual erosion of welfare
entitlement. Allied to this, unemployed youth continue to be disparaged in popular
discourse, labelled amongst other things as feckless and idle. As a consequence, there is
evidence that young people on the margins of society are disengaging from formal
politics, feeling alienated from an arena that they also see as disconnected from their
everyday lives.
This thesis uses the framework of social justice as conceived by Nancy Fraser to
critically analyse perceived injustices affecting the lives of young people. These issues
manifest across all three spheres of injustice as identified by Fraser; the economic, the
cultural and the political spheres of social life - what she calls the domains of
redistribution, recognition and representation, respectively. The findings of my
research study confirms that Fraser’s framework not only allows us to bring together
the multiple injustices impacting on these young people’s lives, but helps to reveal the
ways in which they overlap and interpenetrate, reinforcing marginalisation.
Fraser’s framework is also utilised as a lens through which to analyse and understand
the context within which practitioners working with the young people are operating. As
many writers in the area of youth work argue, it is an ethical requirement that
the practice supports young people towards addressing any injustices impacting
on their lives. This study finds that the ability of practitioners to respond to the issues of
injustice in the lives of the young people is compromised by a performative landscape
centred on meeting pre-ordained targets and outcomes.
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/36184
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
Crowther, J., Boeren, E. and Mackie, A. (2018). ‘Yes or No? Older People, Politics and the Scottish Referendum in 2014,’ Research on Ageing and Social Policy, Vol. 6, (1), pp. 1-25
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dc.relation.hasversion
Mackie, A. and Tett, L. (2013). ‘‘Participatory parity’, young people and policy in Scotland,’ Journal of Education Policy, Vol. 28, (3), pp. 386-403
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dc.subject
social justice
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dc.subject
education
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dc.subject
youth
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dc.subject
youth work
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dc.subject
employability
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dc.subject
inequality
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dc.title
Young people, youth work and social justice: a participatory parity perspective
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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