辜负期望:年龄不平等和青年行动主义

Thomas V. Maher, J. Earl
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引用次数: 0

摘要

先前的社会运动研究关注的是不平等的轴线——尤其是种族、阶级、性别、女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、变性人和酷儿(LGBTQ)身份——对谁参与以及他们如何参与的影响。年龄是另一个重要的不平等轴。普遍存在的“青少年缺陷模型”(youth deficit model)将年轻人塑造成有缺陷的人,需要仁慈的成人监护,这尤其值得年轻人关注。本章评估了赤字模型的内化是否会影响年轻人的行动主义以及他们如何看待自己的参与。通过对来自美国西南部一个城市的40名高中生和大学生的采访,我们发现许多年轻人已经内化了赤字模型的假设,影响了他们何时以及如何参与。这在高中生中表现得最为明显,他们限制了自己的参与,因为他们“年龄不够大”,或者被更“适合年龄”的活动形式所吸引。有趣的是,我们发现大学生更愿意参与网络活动,但也觉得在参与之前必须对问题进行重要的研究,从而使他们与赤字模型对他们政治幼稚的假设保持距离。最后,一些参与者对抗议的无效感到沮丧,这与青年参与无效的赤字模型的叙述产生了共鸣。这些发现强调了理解内化赤字模型的影响以及将年龄视为行动主义不平等轴心的重要性。支持青年参与的最佳方式是将青年视为具有独特兴趣、能力和观点的有能力的行动者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Living Down to Expectations: Age Inequality and Youth Activism
Prior social movement research has focused on the role that axes of inequality – particularly race, class, gender, and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) status – play for who participates and how they do so. Age is another important axis of inequality. The pervasiveness of a youth deficit model, which casts young people as deficient and requiring benevolent adult tutelage, is of particular concern for youth. This chapter assesses whether the internalization of the deficit model influences young people's activism and how they perceive their engagement. Drawing on interviews with 40 high school and college students from a southwestern US city, we find that many young people have internalized deficit-model assumptions, affecting when and how they participated. This was most evident among high school students, who limited their participation because they were “not old enough” or gravitated toward more “age-appropriate” forms of activism. Interestingly, we found college students were more willing to engage in online activism but also felt compelled to do significant research on issues before participating, thereby distancing themselves from the deficit model's assumptions of their political naivety. Finally, some participants felt discouraged by the perceived ineffectiveness of protest, which resonated with deficit model narratives of the futility of youth engagement. These findings highlight the importance of understanding the impacts of an internalized deficit model as well as considering age as an axis of inequality in activism. Youth engagement is best supported by seeing young people as capable actors with unique interests, capacities, and points of view.
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