United States of America
United States
Maternal work early in the lives of children and its distal associations with achievement and behavior problems: A meta-analysis
The effects of preschool education: What we know, how public policy is or is not aligned with the evidence base, and what we need to know
Milwaukee reporters tell how Pulitzer-winning series was done
Working mom's kids turn out fine, 50 years of research says
The effects of preschool education: What we know, how public policy is or is not aligned with the evidence base, and what we need to know
Judge orders child care subsidies continue
Multiple childhoods/ multidisciplinary perspectives
Event description:
The Department of Childhood Studies at Rutgers University is inviting submissions for participation in a conference on Multiple Childhoods/Multidisciplinary Perspectives: Interrograting Normativity in Childhood Studies. As a field, childhood studies has flourished in large part because scholars have recognized the necessity of moving between and beyond traditional academic disciplines and have resisted the idea that there exists one, normative version of childhood common to all. Indeed, Multiple Childhoods/Multidisciplinary Perspectives seeks participation from those who work to counter the presumption or invocation of an unproblematically normative childhood by making visible how varied material and institutional circumstances, ideologies and beliefs and daily practices serve to shape the unfolding lives and experiences of children.
In this spirit, participants are encouraged to interrogate practices and discourses surrounding childhood and childhood studies, asking, for instance: What forms do childhoods take in various social arrangements? How do the dynamics of social class, ethnicity, race, nationality, gender, sexuality, sexual orientation and religion configure notions of "appropriate" and "inappropriate" childhoods? How do children understand various kinds of social difference and inequalities? What about the understandings of researchers, and those who care for or otherwise attend to children? In what ways do conceptualizations of "the child" and of presumed normative childhoods - in research, in the commercial world, in institutional and everyday settings, in literature and discourse - inform the kinds of actions undertaken by and on behalf of children?
Papers may be on any topic or subject that takes children and youth as a central theme and addresses ideas or invocations of normative childhood(s) Examples include, but are not limited to:
- racialized, ethnic, gender and class positioning/identities and the valuation of particular childhoods as "good," "bad" or "different"
- socially and economically disadvantaged childhoods in Global South as well as Global North contexts
- queer/sexually questioning children and youth
- children (and their families) facing physical, developmental and/or emotional challenges and disabilities
- children's rights and forms of public and civic participation
- historical assumptions about normative versions of children and childhoods
- representations of children, youth and childhoods in literature, popular discourse and popular culture (political and commercial speech, advertising, film and television)
- the various childhoods emergent through consumer-media culture
- conceptualizations of normative/non-normative childhoods as codified in law, policy, governance and schools
- methodological and theoretical interventions addressing multiple childhoods
Deadlines: Submission and registration deadlines, fees, conference website and logistical information will be posted in the summer of 2010.