Why did they have to kill all the mink? Young people's trust in governance and their lived citizenship in Denmark during the Pandemic

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Why did they have to kill all the mink? Young people's trust in governance and their lived citizenship in Denmark during the Pandemic. / Brus, Anne.

I: Det nordiske tidsskriftet Barn, Bind 3-4, Nr. 2024, 09.02.2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Brus, A 2024, 'Why did they have to kill all the mink? Young people's trust in governance and their lived citizenship in Denmark during the Pandemic', Det nordiske tidsskriftet Barn, bind 3-4, nr. 2024.

APA

Brus, A. (2024). Why did they have to kill all the mink? Young people's trust in governance and their lived citizenship in Denmark during the Pandemic. Manuskript afsendt til publicering.

Vancouver

Brus A. Why did they have to kill all the mink? Young people's trust in governance and their lived citizenship in Denmark during the Pandemic. Det nordiske tidsskriftet Barn. 2024 feb. 9;3-4(2024).

Author

Brus, Anne. / Why did they have to kill all the mink? Young people's trust in governance and their lived citizenship in Denmark during the Pandemic. I: Det nordiske tidsskriftet Barn. 2024 ; Bind 3-4, Nr. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{903fbce200464b5cac905bdbd1b3ce4d,
title = "Why did they have to kill all the mink?: Young people's trust in governance and their lived citizenship in Denmark during the Pandemic",
abstract = "Based on six focus group interviews in three age groups, 11/12-, 14/15- and 18/19-year-olds, and a hermeneutic analysis driven by the theoretical concept of lived citizenship, this article sheds light on what happens to children and young people{\textquoteright}s lived citizenship, when politicians and institutional representatives are forced to take immediate action in a crisis that intervenes in the lives of all children and young people. A focus on their agentic role in their lived citizenship learning processes is interesting, not least because their loss of rights during the pandemic was a lived experience for everyone. We can conclude that our study gives important insights into children and young people{\textquoteright}s lived citizenship during the pandemic. There was room for agency, participation, and negotiation, but many times their participation possibilities were too limited, with no leeway to negotiate.",
author = "Anne Brus",
year = "2024",
month = feb,
day = "9",
language = "English",
volume = "3-4",
journal = "Det nordiske tidsskriftet Barn",
publisher = "Norsk Senter for Barneforskning, NTNU",
number = "2024",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Why did they have to kill all the mink?

T2 - Young people's trust in governance and their lived citizenship in Denmark during the Pandemic

AU - Brus, Anne

PY - 2024/2/9

Y1 - 2024/2/9

N2 - Based on six focus group interviews in three age groups, 11/12-, 14/15- and 18/19-year-olds, and a hermeneutic analysis driven by the theoretical concept of lived citizenship, this article sheds light on what happens to children and young people’s lived citizenship, when politicians and institutional representatives are forced to take immediate action in a crisis that intervenes in the lives of all children and young people. A focus on their agentic role in their lived citizenship learning processes is interesting, not least because their loss of rights during the pandemic was a lived experience for everyone. We can conclude that our study gives important insights into children and young people’s lived citizenship during the pandemic. There was room for agency, participation, and negotiation, but many times their participation possibilities were too limited, with no leeway to negotiate.

AB - Based on six focus group interviews in three age groups, 11/12-, 14/15- and 18/19-year-olds, and a hermeneutic analysis driven by the theoretical concept of lived citizenship, this article sheds light on what happens to children and young people’s lived citizenship, when politicians and institutional representatives are forced to take immediate action in a crisis that intervenes in the lives of all children and young people. A focus on their agentic role in their lived citizenship learning processes is interesting, not least because their loss of rights during the pandemic was a lived experience for everyone. We can conclude that our study gives important insights into children and young people’s lived citizenship during the pandemic. There was room for agency, participation, and negotiation, but many times their participation possibilities were too limited, with no leeway to negotiate.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3-4

JO - Det nordiske tidsskriftet Barn

JF - Det nordiske tidsskriftet Barn

IS - 2024

ER -

ID: 380498056