2014
DOI: 10.1057/ejdr.2013.65
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Theorising Age and Generation in Development: A Relational Approach

Abstract: This introduction outlines the analytical approach informing the articles presented in this special issue. The project of 'generationing' development involves re-thinking development as distinctly generational in its dynamics. For this, we adopt a relational approach to the study of young people in development, which overcomes the limitations inherent to common categorising approaches. Concepts of age and generation are employed to conceptualise young people as social actors and life phases such as childhood a… Show more

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Cited by 56 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Our approach is informed by a conceptualisation of ‘relationality’ which considers age to be far more social than chronological ( Huijsmans et al, 2014 ). Age ‘is constituted in interaction and gains its meaning in interaction in the context of larger social forces’ ( Laz, 1998 : 86).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our approach is informed by a conceptualisation of ‘relationality’ which considers age to be far more social than chronological ( Huijsmans et al, 2014 ). Age ‘is constituted in interaction and gains its meaning in interaction in the context of larger social forces’ ( Laz, 1998 : 86).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet as this Special Issue reveals, whereas African children have valid knowledge and perspectives, they also occupy, to use Ryans' (2008) words, 'a paradoxical position both as object of knowledge and subjects who know' (p. 576). We critique an understanding of age as a line of difference between childhood and adulthood and, in line with Huijsmans et al (2014), argue that adopting a narrow 'child focus' -instead of the relational notion of 'generationing' -disconnects the analysis of children's lives from the very processes of social change it is embedded in. This has important methodological and epistemological implications, that is, to not only situate children's perspectives in wider social contexts, processes and relationships but also consider it from the vantage point of intergenerational relationships.…”
Section: Generationing Social Reproductionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Much attention has been given to the material outcomes of international development, but there has been less theorization of the ways in which development as practice and ideology transforms how children are constituted as subjects (Huijsmans et al 2014). Possibly one of the most powerful impacts has been widespread acceptance of the conception of childhood promulgated by the CRC and similar international development initiatives.…”
Section: Development As Discourse Constituting New Subjectsmentioning
confidence: 99%