Addressing the Democratic Disconnect

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Abstract

In Australia and the UK ordinary young people are identifying and acting on issues that matter, and in everyday ways they are shaping the kind of society they want to live in. This book has sought to engage directly with their views and experiences of participation, to explore how they reflect on and respond to the dominant discourses of youth participation that underpin concerns and hopes about the future of democracy. The experiences of the young people in this study unfold at the intersections of policy, new organisational practices and everyday life. These intersections illuminate the dynamics underpinning the democratic disconnect: a gap between institutional understandings and expectations of young citizens and the nature and substance of youthful forms of political identification and action. This gap — or disconnect — is widely seen to be a ‘problem’ of youth disengagement with democracy, a problem that tends to be viewed as either one of ‘civic deficit’ or ‘new forms of engagement’ (Harris et al., 2007: 20–21). However, the young people in this study demonstrate that the multiple and varying ways they identify and relate to issues that matter and attempt to shape the communities and society they live in are part of an unfolding process of being political. This is fundamentally a dynamic process, the uncertainties of which require more engagement on the part of traditional institutions and political elites.

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APA

Collin, P. (2015). Addressing the Democratic Disconnect. In Studies in Childhood and Youth (pp. 155–169). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137348838_7

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