A new
book by the authors from RC 34:
A
New Youth? Young People, Generations and Family Life
Edited by Carmen Leccardi and Elisabetta Ruspini (University
of Milano-Bicocca)
Publisher: Ashgate (2006)
ISBN: 0-7546-4422-7
"A
New Youth?" provides a cross-cultural perspective on
the challenges and problems posed by young people's transition
to adulthood.
The
authors address questions such as: What are the experiences
of being young in different European countries? What can
we learn about the differences of being young in non-European
countries? Are young people developing new attitudes towards
society? What are the risks associated with the transition
of youth to adulthood? Can we identify new attitudes about
citizenship? And on a more general level, are there experiences
and new social meanings associated with youth?
The
volume is comparative between various European and non-European
countries in order to identify the emerging models of transition.
These characteristics are connected with broader social,
political and cultural changes: changes related to extended
education, increasing women's participation in the labour
market, changing welfare regimes, as well as changes in
political regimes and in the representation and construction
of individual identities and biographies, towards an increasing
individualization.
The
work offers critical reflections in the realm of sociology
of youth by providing broader understandings of the term
'youth'. The detailed analysis of new forms of marginality
and social exclusion among young people offers valuable
insight for policy development and political debate.
Table of contents:
Foreword
(Andy Furlong)
Introduction (Carmen Leccardi and Elisabetta Ruspini)
Part
I: Reconceptualizing Youth. New Perspectives and Challenges
1.
Facing Uncertainty. Temporality and Biographies in the New
Century (Carmen Leccardi)
2. Coping with Yo-Yo-Transitions. Young Adults’ Struggle
for Support, between Family and State in Comparative Perspective
(Andy Biggart and Andreas Walther)
3. Individualization and the Changing Youth Life (Sven Morch
and Helle Andersen)
4. The Sky is Always Falling. (Un)Changing Views on Youth
in the US (Gunilla Holm, Toby Daspit and Allison J. Kelaher
Young)
5. Social Changes and Multicultural Values of Young People
(Helena Helve)
Part
II: Young People and Relations Between Generations
6. Solidarity in New Zealand. Parental Support for Children
in a Three-Generational Context (Sarah Hillcoat-Nalletamby
and Arunachalam Dharmalingam)
7. Living with Parents: A Research Study on Italian Young
People and Their Mothers (Monica Santoro)
8. Work and Care in the Life-Course of Young Adults in the
Netherlands (Manuela du Bois-Reymond and Yolanda te Poel)
9. Daughters of the Women’s Movement Generation Conflicts
and Social Change (Ute Gerhard)
Part
III: Transitions to Adulthood, Social Change and Social
Exclusion
10. Young People and Family Life in Eastern Europe (Ken
Roberts)
11. Transition to Adulthood in Georgia: Dynamics of Generational
and Gender Roles
in Post-Totalitarian Society (Nana Sumbadze and George Tarkhan-Mouravi)
12. Going Against the Tide. Young Lone Mothers in Italy
(Elisabetta Ruspini)
13. The Transitions to Adulthood of Young People with Multiple
Disadvantages (Jane Parry)
14. Growing Up Transgender: Stories of an Excluded Population
(Surya Monro)