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This edited book offers a collection of highly nuanced accounts of
children and childhoods in peace and conflict across political time
and space. Organized according to three broad themes (ontologies,
pedagogies, and contingencies), each chapter explores the
complexities of a particular case study, providing new insights
into the ways children's lives figure as terrains of engagement,
contestation, ambivalence, resistance, and reproduction of
militarisms. The first three chapters challenge dominant ontologies
that prefigure childhood in particular ways. These include who
counts as a child worthy of protection, questions of voice and
participation, and the diminution of agency. The chapters in the
second section bring to view everyday pedagogies whereby myriad
knowledges, performances, practices, and competencies may function
to militarize children's lives, including in but not limited to
advanced (post)industrial societies of the global North. The third
and final section includes investigations that foreground questions
of responsibility to children. Here, contributors assess, among
other things, resilience-building, the exigencies of protection,
and the ethics of military recruitment practices targeting
children.
Responding to security scholars' puzzling dearth of attention to
children and childhoods, the contributors to this volume reveal the
ways in which they not only are already present in security
discourses but are actually indispensable to them and to the
political projects they make possible. From zones of conflict to
everyday life contexts in the (post)industrial Global North,
dominant ideas about childhood work to regulate the constitution of
political subjects whilst variously enabling and foreclosing a wide
range of political possibilities. Whether on the battlefields of
Syria, in the halls of the UN, or the conceptual musings of
disciplinary Security Studies, claims about or ostensibly on behalf
of children are ubiquitous. Recognizing children as engaged
political subjects, however, challenges us to bring a sustained
critical gaze to the discursive and semiotic deployments of
children and childhood in projects not of their making as well as
to the ways in which power circulates through and around them. This
book was originally published as a special issue of Critical
Studies on Security.
Responding to security scholars' puzzling dearth of attention to
children and childhoods, the contributors to this volume reveal the
ways in which they not only are already present in security
discourses but are actually indispensable to them and to the
political projects they make possible. From zones of conflict to
everyday life contexts in the (post)industrial Global North,
dominant ideas about childhood work to regulate the constitution of
political subjects whilst variously enabling and foreclosing a wide
range of political possibilities. Whether on the battlefields of
Syria, in the halls of the UN, or the conceptual musings of
disciplinary Security Studies, claims about or ostensibly on behalf
of children are ubiquitous. Recognizing children as engaged
political subjects, however, challenges us to bring a sustained
critical gaze to the discursive and semiotic deployments of
children and childhood in projects not of their making as well as
to the ways in which power circulates through and around them. This
book was originally published as a special issue of Critical
Studies on Security.
This edited book offers a collection of highly nuanced accounts of
children and childhoods in peace and conflict across political time
and space. Organized according to three broad themes (ontologies,
pedagogies, and contingencies), each chapter explores the
complexities of a particular case study, providing new insights
into the ways children's lives figure as terrains of engagement,
contestation, ambivalence, resistance, and reproduction of
militarisms. The first three chapters challenge dominant ontologies
that prefigure childhood in particular ways. These include who
counts as a child worthy of protection, questions of voice and
participation, and the diminution of agency. The chapters in the
second section bring to view everyday pedagogies whereby myriad
knowledges, performances, practices, and competencies may function
to militarize children's lives, including in but not limited to
advanced (post)industrial societies of the global North. The third
and final section includes investigations that foreground questions
of responsibility to children. Here, contributors assess, among
other things, resilience-building, the exigencies of protection,
and the ethics of military recruitment practices targeting
children.
This book examines how and why, in the context of International
Relations, children's subjecthood has all too often been relegated
to marginal terrains and children themselves automatically
associated with the need for protection in vulnerable situations:
as child soldiers, refugees, and conflated with women, all
typically with the accent on the Global South. Challenging us to
think critically about childhood as a technology of global
governance, the authors explore alternative ways of finding
children and their agency in a more central position in IR, in
terms of various forms of children's activism, children and climate
change, children and security, children and resilience, and in
their inevitable role in governing the future. Focusing on the
problems, pitfalls, promises, and prospects of addressing children
and childhoods in International Relations, this book places
children more squarely in the purview of political subjecthood and
hence more centrally in IR.
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