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The Young Lives project is a long-term study of childhood poverty
in developing countries. International experts follow two groups of
children in poor communities in four countries as they grow into
young adults with five rounds of surveys, interspersed with
on-going participatory research with a smaller number of the
children, planned to cover a period of 15 years. This book
represents the engagement of Young Lives with researchers and
debates in the field, reflecting on the first two rounds of data
coming from Ethiopia, India, Peru and Vietnam, with supporting
material from Tanzania and South Africa. Topics include the ethics
of research, the long-term causes and consequences of childhood
poverty, and the resilience and optimism shown by children and
their families. The authors also look at the dynamics of childhood
poverty -- how and why some families move in and out of poverty as
well as learning, children's timeuse and life transitions --
focusing on children's daily lives, their families and communities.
"This deeply disturbing but brilliant collection will be a
challenge to a burgeoning literature on children in war situations
. . . especially] to those who wish to make a black and white
distinction between children and adults." ?- Children, Youth and
Environments War leads not just to widespread death but also to
extensive displacement, overwhelming fear, and economic
devastation. It weakens social ties, threatens household survival
and undermines the family's capacity to care for its most
vulnerable members. Every year it kills and maims countless numbers
of young people, undermines thousands of others psychologically and
deprives many of the economic, educational, health and social
opportunities which most of us consider essential for children's
effective growth and well being. Based on detailed ethnographic
description and on young people's own accounts, this volume
provides insights into children's experiences as both survivors and
perpetrators of violence. It focuses on girls who have been exposed
to sexual exploitation and abuse, children who head households or
are separated from their families, displaced children and young
former combatants who are attempting to adjust to their changed
circumstances following the cessation of conflict. In this sense,
the volume bears witness to the grim effects of warfare and
displacement on the young. Nevertheless, despite the abundant
evidence of suffering, it maintains that children are not the
passive victims of conflict but engage actively with the conditions
of war, an outlook that challenges orthodox research perspectives
that rely heavily on medicalized notions of 'victim' and 'trauma.'
War leads not just to widespread death but also to extensive
displacement, overwhelming fear, and economic devastation. It
weakens social ties, threatens household survival and undermines
the family's capacity to care for its most vulnerable members.
Every year it kills and maims countless numbers of young people,
undermines thousands of others psychologically and deprives many of
the economic, educational, health and social opportunities which
most of us consider essential for children's effective growth and
well being. Based on detailed ethnographic description and on young
people's own accounts, this volume provides insights into
children's experiences as both survivors and perpetrators of
violence. It focuses on girls who have been exposed to sexual
exploitation and abuse, children who head households or are
separated from their families, displaced children and young former
combatants who are attempting to adjust to their changed
circumstances following the cessation of conflict. In this sense,
the volume bears witness to the grim effects of warfare and
displacement on the young. Nevertheless, despite the abundant
evidence of suffering, it maintains that children are not the
passive victims of conflict but engage actively with the conditions
of war, an outlook that challenges orthodox research perspectives
that rely heavily on medicalized notions of 'victim' and 'trauma.'
Using life course analysis from the Young Lives study of 12,000
children growing up in Ethiopia, India, Peru and Vietnam over the
past 15 years, this book draws on evidence on two cohorts of
children, from 1 to 15 and from 8 to 22. It examines how poverty
affects children's development in low and middle income countries,
and how policy has been used to improve their lives, then goes on
to show when key developmental differences occur. It uses new
evidence to develop a framework of what matters most and when and
outlines effective policy approaches to inform the no-one left
behind Sustainable Development Goal agenda.
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