FAMILIES INTERGENERATIONALITY AND PEER GROUP RELATIONS
23,150.00₹ 33,144.00₹
- Author: SAMANTHA PUNCH
- ISBN: 9789812870254
- Availability: In Stock
Buy FAMILIES INTERGENERATIONALITY AND PEER GROUP RELATIONS | Social Science Books, New Arrivals
This volume addresses children and young people’s
relationships both within and beyond the context of the family. It begins
with familial relationships and the home by examining the social and cultural
complexities of families, intimacies and interdependencies, including the
dynamics of families as spatial units (nuclear, multi-generational,
alternative) and the roles that children play (as carers etc.). In addition to
considering child/parent relations, sibling relationships and birth order, the
initial section includes particular dimensions of children's familial
relationships in diverse contexts, such as family food practices, aspirations
and work practices.
The second section explores geographical dimensions of
adult/child relationships beyond the dynamics of the family and across the
lifecourse. It considers the roles that intergenerationality plays in
children's and young people's lives as well as their links with wider
communities. The section addresses broader conceptual issues and themes
(child-adult relationships outside the home; intergenerational geographies and
spaces; and the intergenerational city) while also providing more focused
discussions of current issues related to the geographies of
intergenerationality including adoption, looked after children and fertility.
The final section addresses children and young people's
relationships with one another: friendship, peer group relations, and sexuality. It explores the geographies and specialties of effective relations and emotional practices among children and young people. Geographies
of bodies and embodiment and their connection to identities is an important
part of this section. The chapters range from cross-cultural comparisons of age
mixing among children to specific kinds of relationship formations between
children and young people (e.g. friendship; sexual relations; gangs; bullying)
and the spaces and places (including cyberspace) that facilitate, impede and
organise these relationships. The diverse relationships that children and young
people form with both one another and with adults have significant geographical
dimensions.