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The Danish Welfare State analyzes a broad range of areas, such as
globalization, labor marked, family life, health and social
exclusion, the book demonstrates that life in a modern welfare
state is changing rapidly, creating both challenges and
possibilities for future management.
Young people's lives continue to be the topic of public scrutiny
and recurring 'moral panics'. Smoking cannabis, speeding, and
engaging in street-level fights are depicted as activities based on
'poor choices' or simple hedonism, putting young people's futures
at risk. Based on comprehensive, qualitative research with young
people in Denmark, this book illustrates how such individualised
accounts miss out on the inherently social character of risk-taking
activities. Youth, Risk, Routine introduces a new approach to
risk-taking activities as being an integral and routinised part of
young people's everyday life. By applying social theories of
practice, this insightful volume presents a framework for
understanding the routinised dimensions of young people's
engagement in risk-taking and how this is embedded in, intertwined
with, and held in place by other everyday practices. Indeed,
through extensive empirical analyses of the rich material at hand,
the authors explore how routinisation, coordination, embodiment,
and social context are central aspects for understanding how, why,
and when young people engage in risk-taking practices. Youth, Risk,
Routine will be of interest to students and scholars in sociology,
criminology, and social work as well as wider social science
audiences, particularly those interested in exploring the empirical
potential of social theories of practice.
Young people's lives continue to be the topic of public scrutiny
and recurring 'moral panics'. Smoking cannabis, speeding, and
engaging in street-level fights are depicted as activities based on
'poor choices' or simple hedonism, putting young people's futures
at risk. Based on comprehensive, qualitative research with young
people in Denmark, this book illustrates how such individualised
accounts miss out on the inherently social character of risk-taking
activities. Youth, Risk, Routine introduces a new approach to
risk-taking activities as being an integral and routinised part of
young people's everyday life. By applying social theories of
practice, this insightful volume presents a framework for
understanding the routinised dimensions of young people's
engagement in risk-taking and how this is embedded in, intertwined
with, and held in place by other everyday practices. Indeed,
through extensive empirical analyses of the rich material at hand,
the authors explore how routinisation, coordination, embodiment,
and social context are central aspects for understanding how, why,
and when young people engage in risk-taking practices. Youth, Risk,
Routine will be of interest to students and scholars in sociology,
criminology, and social work as well as wider social science
audiences, particularly those interested in exploring the empirical
potential of social theories of practice.
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