Published August 31, 2017 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Citizenship's tangled web: Associations, gaps and tensions in formulations of European youth active citizenship across disciplines

  • 1. London School of Economics and Political Science
  • 2. University of Tartu
  • 3. University of Porto
  • 4. National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
  • 5. University of Bologna
  • 6. Masaryk University
  • 7. Orebro University

Description

ABSTRACT

How does academic literature across various disciplines conceptualize and empirically address active citizenship? What are the potential benefits and dangers of dominant epistemological and ideological perspectives on ‘good citizenship’? Our paper engages with these questions by drawing on literature across 8 disciplines. We used textual analysis software T-LAB to quantify and visualize co-occurrences, word associations and thematic clusters in the abstracts of 770 texts gathered by eight country teams and original in-depth qualitative analyses of ideological positions and discourses taken up in a selection of key texts across the corpus. Our paper elaborates the findings: that many of the key themes surrounding young people and citizenship in the literature share little or no connection with European citizenship; that there is a significant gap in the literature on young European citizens; and that studies connected to internal, status-based factors connected to citizenship are far more prevalent than those examining external, practice-based factors or dissidence and dissent. Our conclusions examine the potential normative implications of the disjuncture between dominant conceptions and critical accounts of youth active citizenship.

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Citizenship s tangled web Associations gaps and tensions in formulations of European youth active citizenship across disciplines.pdf

Additional details

Funding

CATCH-EyoU – Constructing AcTive CitizensHip with European Youth: Policies, Practices, Challenges and Solutions 649538
European Commission