2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1528-3585.2012.00484.x
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Immigrant Youth, hip-hop, and Feminist Pedagogy: Outlines of an Alternative Integration Policy in Vienna, Austria

Abstract: This article describes a local social work project currently operating in the Viennese suburbs of Austria with second-generation migrant teenagers (who come mostly from working class guestworker families of Turkish and Yugoslav origin). This project which applies feminist pedagogy is successfully providing a platform for underprivileged teens to express themselves through Rap music and hip-hop (by enabling access to the Internet and music studios), thereby offering an alternative to violence and drug use. The … Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
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“…For Forman, such hood work centres on 'educational and prosocial messaging for youths that are enacted within and through hip-hop' (2013: 245). Globally, hood work has become an effective tool to reach disadvantaged and disillusioned young people, particularly in the context of multiculturalism and social exclusion (see Franz 2012;Metro-Roland 2010). Translating Forman's American model of hood work to diverse local challenges, hood work has become an important tool for managing local togetherness through a peace-making approach (Hunter 2005;Pruitt 2011).…”
Section: Hybrid Hood Work: Fostering Locality Through Intersubjectivitymentioning
confidence: 98%
“…For Forman, such hood work centres on 'educational and prosocial messaging for youths that are enacted within and through hip-hop' (2013: 245). Globally, hood work has become an effective tool to reach disadvantaged and disillusioned young people, particularly in the context of multiculturalism and social exclusion (see Franz 2012;Metro-Roland 2010). Translating Forman's American model of hood work to diverse local challenges, hood work has become an important tool for managing local togetherness through a peace-making approach (Hunter 2005;Pruitt 2011).…”
Section: Hybrid Hood Work: Fostering Locality Through Intersubjectivitymentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Cities entail a multitude of encounters with a great variety of content that can either facilitate migrant inclusion or obstruct it. The articles in this review discussed several urban places, primarily child care service centres, schools, housing estates, neighbourhoods, open urban spaces (e.g., parks, streets, and malls), and places more directly involved in formal integration services, such as social welfare offices and agencies providing services to facilitate migrant inclusion (e.g., Franz 2012). Geens, Roets, and Vandenbroeck (2017) studied the everyday encounters in childcare services of parents having migrated to urban areas in Belgium, comparing these to those of non-migrant parents.…”
Section: Bridging Relations In Urban Spacementioning
confidence: 99%
“…185,186 Strang 187 evaluated the Holistic Integration Service for refugees in Scotland, which included a large number of different components, including some directly relevant to social connectedness. Franz 188 described an outreach social work initiative that involved engaging first-and second-generation migrant youth in Austria in music and creative activities, with the potential to positively affect social connections and self-worth, and Kipling 189 examined the role of citizenship ceremonies on integration and belonging.…”
Section: Other (Individual)mentioning
confidence: 99%