Negotiating Vulnerabilities in Space and Time in the Twenty-First Century

被引:0
|
作者
Black R. [1 ]
Walsh L. [2 ]
机构
[1] School of Education, Deakin University, Melbourne
[2] Faculty of Education, Monash University, Melbourne
来源
Journal of Applied Youth Studies | 2021年 / 4卷 / 4期
关键词
Higher education; Hope; Precarity; University student; Vulnerability;
D O I
10.1007/s43151-021-00030-y
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Young university students are experiencing a changing relationship with the future as economic and geopolitical anxieties alter the temporal and spatial horizons with which they engage. Du Bois-Reymond and López Blasco suggested almost 20 years ago that ‘youth is now […] a life condition that is marked by unpredictability, vulnerability and reversibility’ (2003, p. 20). This situation has only accelerated since then. This paper draws on the authors’ research in the UK, France and Australia to consider how university students imagine a future that is essentially unknowable. At the time of the authors’ interviews, this future included conditions of vulnerability within the living social present that extended into the anticipated future and that ranged from the local to the global in their origins and impact. These conditions have since been even further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and the global recession accompanying it. Despite the uncertainty arising from these conditions of vulnerability, almost all interviewees read the future as possibility or potentiality as reported by Cook (Time & Society 25(3): 700–717, 2016). The paper concludes that young people’s lived experience of time and space is being reshaped by complex forces beyond their control as discussed by McLeod (British Journal of Sociology of Education 38(1): 13–25, 2017), but it also mounts an argument for the durability of young people’s relationship to hope. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. part of Springer Nature.
引用
收藏
页码:329 / 343
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Semiology of suicide in twenty-first century
    Courtet, Philippe
    Castroman, Jorge Lopez
    Olie, Emilie
    ANNALES MEDICO-PSYCHOLOGIQUES, 2016, 174 (06): : 503 - 508
  • [2] Civil Engineering at the Crossroads in the Twenty-First Century
    Francisco Ramírez
    Andres Seco
    Science and Engineering Ethics, 2012, 18 : 681 - 687
  • [3] Civil Engineering at the Crossroads in the Twenty-First Century
    Ramirez, Francisco
    Seco, Andres
    SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING ETHICS, 2012, 18 (04) : 681 - 687
  • [4] A review of twenty-first century higher education
    Chan, Shirley
    JOURNAL OF FURTHER AND HIGHER EDUCATION, 2018, 42 (03) : 327 - 338
  • [5] Twenty-first century skills: meaning, usage and value
    Tight, Malcolm
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HIGHER EDUCATION, 2021, 11 (02) : 160 - 174
  • [6] The utopia of conceptualizing the Latin American university of the twenty-first century
    Rama, Claudio
    INNOVACION EDUCATIVA-MEXICO, 2012, 12 (60): : 105 - 123
  • [7] Improving political science degree programmes in the twenty-first century
    Ahmad, Tashfeen
    REVIEW OF ECONOMICS AND POLITICAL SCIENCE, 2020, 5 (03) : 231 - 247
  • [8] Developing into similarity: global teacher education in the twenty-first century
    Loomis, Steven
    Rodriguez, Jacob
    Tillman, Rachel
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF TEACHER EDUCATION, 2008, 31 (03) : 233 - 245
  • [9] USING ETHNOGRAPHY TO UNDERSTAND TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY COLLEGE LIFE
    Iloh, Constance
    Tierney, William G.
    HUMAN AFFAIRS-POSTDISCIPLINARY HUMANITIES & SOCIAL SCIENCES QUARTERLY, 2014, 24 (01): : 20 - 39
  • [10] Position of twenty-first century teachers: evaluation in terms of innovation and technology
    Kilicer, Kerem
    WORLD CONFERENCE ON EDUCATIONAL SCIENCES - NEW TRENDS AND ISSUES IN EDUCATIONAL SCIENCES, 2009, 1 (01): : 1479 - 1484