What does it mean to be young, to be economically disadvantaged,
and to be subject to constant surveillance both from the formal
agencies of the state and from the informal challenge of competing
youth groups? What is life like for young people living on the
fringe of global cities in late modernity, no longer at the center
of city life, but pushed instead to new and insecure margins of the
urban inner city? How are changing patterns of migration and work,
along with shifting gender roles and expectations, impacting
marginalized youth in the radically transformed urban city of the
twenty-first century?
In Lost Youth in the Global City, Jo-Anne Dillabough and
Jacqueline Kennelly focus on young people who live at the margins
of urban centers, the "edges" where low-income, immigrant, and
other disenfranchised youth are increasingly finding and defining
themselves. Taking the imperative of multi-sited ethnography and
urban youth cultures as a starting point, this rich and layered
book offers a detailed exploration of the ways in which these
groups of young people, marked by economic disadvantage and ethnic
and religious diversity, have sought to navigate a new urban
terrain and, in so doing, have come to see themselves in new ways.
By giving these young people shape and form - both looking across
their experiences in different cities and attending to their
particularities - Lost Youth in the Global City sets a productive
and generative agenda for the field of critical youth studies.
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