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Journal ArticleDOI

Agency as vulnerability: accounting for children's movement to the streets of Accra

Phillip Mizen, +1 more
- 01 May 2013 - 
- Vol. 61, Iss: 2, pp 363-382
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors consider the agency of children moving to the streets of Accra, Ghana's capital city, and argue that children do frame their departures as matters of individual choice and self-determination, and that in doing so they speak of a considerable capacity for action.
Abstract
This paper considers the agency of children moving to the streets of Accra, Ghana's capital city. A much used but largely unexamined concept, agency is nevertheless commonly deployed in childhood studies as a means to stress the capacity of children to choose to do things. In the literature on street and working children, and a cognate area of study concerned with children's independent migration, this has involved accounts of children's agency made meaningful by reference to theories of rational choice or to the normative force of childhood. It is our argument that both approaches leave unanswered important questions and to counter these omissions we draw upon the arguments of social realists and, in particular, the stress they place on vulnerability as the basis for human agency. We develop this argument further by reference to our research with street children. By drawing upon the children's accounts of leaving their households and heading for Accra's streets, it is our contention that these children do frame their departures as matters of individual choice and self-determination, and that in doing so they speak of a considerable capacity for action. Nevertheless, a deeper reading of their testimonies also points to the children's understandings of their own vulnerability. By examining what we see as their inability to be dependent upon family and kin, we stress the importance of the children's perceptions of their vulnerability, frailty and need as the basis for a fuller understanding of their agency in leaving their households. © 2013 The Author. The Sociological Review © 2013 The Editorial Board of The Sociological Review.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Reconceptualising Children’s Agency as Continuum and Interdependence

Tatek Abebe
- 05 Mar 2019 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify and discuss multiple and often contradictory concepts of agency as well as a framework for re-conceptualizing it as a continuum, and as interdependent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Theorising Age and Generation in Development: A Relational Approach

TL;DR: In this article, the authors adopt a relational approach to the study of young people in development, which overcomes the limitations inherent to common categorising approaches, such as age and generation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why have generational orderings been marginalised in the social sciences including childhood studies

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider why age and generation tend not to be recognized as social variables in the same way that gender, ethnicity and class are mainstreamed within Social Science disciplines.
Journal ArticleDOI

Agentic practice and privileging orientations among privately educated young women

TL;DR: This article examined factors driving the agentic practices of young women who are privately educated and found that these different internal conversations lead to the emergence of differing projects of the self, expressed through practices that by their very nature of being committed to self-directed progress can be understood as being agentic.
References
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Book

Being Human: The Problem of Agency

TL;DR: Archer argues that being human depends on an interaction with the real world in which practice takes primacy over language in the emergence of human self-consciousness, thought, emotionality and personal identity as discussed by the authors.
Book

The sociology of childhood

TL;DR: In this article, a sociological study of childhood is presented, focusing on the structure of childhood and children's Interpretive Reproductions in the context of social change, families and children.
Book ChapterDOI

A new paradigm for the sociology of childhood? : Provenance, promise and problems

Alan Prout, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present emergent paradigm as an approach to the study of childhood and encapsulate what people feel to be the nature of the social institution of childhood, the immaturity of children is a biological fact of life but the ways in which this immat maturity is understood and made meaningful are a fact of culture.
Book

Towards a sociology for childhood : thinking from children's lives

Berry Mayall
TL;DR: The moral status of childhood, the generation and gender, and comparing childhoods are examined.
BookDOI

The future of childhood : towards the interdisciplinary study of children

Alan Prout
TL;DR: In this article, the dualities of the social and the nature of childhood are discussed in the context of a globalizing world, and the future of childhood is discussed in detail.