Abstract
Debates about ‘security’ rarely feature children or younger people, whilst research with children and young people seldom focuses upon issues traditionally found within security studies. Building upon long-standing debates about political geographies of youth and political participation as well as feminist geopolitics and emerging discussions about children’s and young people’s geopolitics, we chart young people’s everyday landscapes of security and insecurity. Key themes explored here include: secure pasts and insecure futures; ontological security and insecure selves; online security and digital insecurities; home(land) securities and insecure households and families; and global securities and insecure worlds.
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CITATION STYLE
Hopkins, P., Hörschelmann, K., Benwell, M. C., & Studemeyer, C. (2019, May 4). Young people’s everyday landscapes of security and insecurity. Social and Cultural Geography. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.1080/14649365.2018.1460863
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