Compiling decades of fieldwork, two acclaimed scholars offer strategies for strengthening democracies by nurturing the voices of children and encouraging public awareness of their role as citizens.
Voice, Choice, and Action is the fruit of the extraordinary personal and professional partnership of a psychiatrist and a neurobiologist whose research and social activism have informed each other for the last thirty years. Inspired by the 1989 United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, Felton Earls and Mary Carlson embarked on a series of international studies that would recognize the voice of children. In Romania they witnessed the consequences of infant institutionalization under the Ceaușescu regime. In Brazil they encountered street children who had banded together to advocate effectively for themselves. In Chicago Earls explored the origins of prosocial and antisocial behavior with teenagers. Children all over the world demonstrated an unappreciated but powerful interest in the common good.
On the basis of these experiences, Earls and Carlson mounted a rigorous field study in Moshi, Tanzania, which demonstrated that young citizens could change attitudes about HIV/AIDS and mobilize their communities to confront the epidemic. The program, outlined in this book, promoted children's communicative and reasoning capacities, guiding their growth as deliberative citizens. The program's success in reducing stigma and promoting universal testing for HIV exceeded all expectations.
Here in vivid detail are the science, ethics, and everyday practice of fostering young citizens eager to confront diverse health and social challenges. At a moment when adults regularly profess dismay about our capacity for effective action, Voice, Choice, and Action offers inspiration and tools for participatory democracy.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
September 15, 2020 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780674250727
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780674250727
- File size: 1255 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
July 20, 2020
Neurobiologist Earls and psychiatrist Carlson draw on decades of original fieldwork to present a wide-ranging and inspiring study of citizen engagement among young people. Based on research conducted in Brazil, Romania, Tanzania, and the South Side of Chicago, Earls and Carlson contend that campaigns to secure rights for disadvantaged youth, and the active involvement of children and young adults in public discourse, leads to broader progressive social changes. They write movingly about the traumas of children abandoned to Romania’s state-run residential institutions, the political activism of Brazilian street kids, and the roots of antisocial behavior in Chicago teenagers. The centerpiece of the book is a comprehensive field study conducted in Moshi, Tanzania, that demonstrates the effectiveness of young people in reducing the stigma around HIV/AIDS. Earls and Carlson provide an educational program for improving children’s communication skills and reasoning capacities in order to make them effective advocates for themselves and others. The authors present their rigorous academic research in accessible prose laced with memorable character profiles. Readers interested in childhood development, progressive causes, and public health will want to take note.
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
subjects
Languages
- English
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