Book Chapter
Details
Citation
Punch S (2007) Generational Power Relations in Rural Bolivia. In: Panelli R, Punch S & Robson E (eds.) Global Perspectives on Rural Childhood and Youth: Young Rural Lives. Routledge Studies in Human Geography, 17. Abingdon, Oxon: Taylor & Francis (Routledge UK), pp. 151-164. http://www.routledgeeducation.com/books/Global-Perspectives-on-Rural-Childhood-and-Youth-isbn9780415397032
Abstract
First paragraph: It can be argued that childhood is a relational concept which forms part of the generational order and that generational processes shape the nature of child–adult relations (Alanen 2001; Mayall 2002). When the social positions of ‘children’ and ‘adults’ are ‘constituted, reproduced and transformed through relational activity’ (Mayall 2002: 40), this can be referred to as practices of ‘generationing’ (Alanen 2001). Thus, as Alanen (2001: 21) argues, childhood and adulthood are connected and interdependent. However, children’s structural position in society means that generally they have less power than adults. Thus, adults’ generational location enables them to wield more power over children and this is an example of Lukes’s (2005) relational definition of power as one social group exercises ‘power over’ another.
Keywords
children; generations; rural; Bolivia; power; migration; childhood; Children and adults Bolivia; Power (Social sciences)
Status | Published |
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Title of series | Routledge Studies in Human Geography |
Number in series | 17 |
Publication date | 30/06/2007 |
URL | |
Publisher | Taylor & Francis (Routledge UK) |
Publisher URL | |
Place of publication | Abingdon, Oxon |
ISBN | 978-0-415-39703-2 |
People (1)
Professor, Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology