Call for Papers: Children, Childhood and Youth in the British World: Historical Perspectives
Friday 19 July 2013 at King's College London
Hosted by Menzies Centre for Australian Studies and Department of History, King's College London
Convenors: Dr Shirleene Robinson and Dr Simon Sleight
Symposium Aims and Themes
Although it is a comparatively recent field of study, the history of young people is a burgeoning field of inquiry, with the potential to illuminate many social and cultural aspects of the past. Children, Childhood and Youth in the British World will provide a scholarly forum for discussion of the lived experiences of children and the construction of modes of childhood in the context of the British World. We are particularly interested in locating children, childhood and youth in a broader social context and in acknowledging young people as active historical agents.
Children, Childhood and Youth in the British World takes place on 19 July 2013. The symposium's London location provides an ideal site to reflect on the historical reach and limitations of the British World and to place young people's experiences into transnational context. It is hoped the symposium will establish research networks and a basis for further investigation and discussion. The conference organisers will aim to publish a selection of conference papers in 2014.
While other submissions are welcome, papers might potentially address themes such as:
* Regulation and childhood
* Children's spaces
* Ego histoire and archives of childhood
* Interdisciplinary approaches to the history of young people
* Images of children
* Literary childhoods
* Violence and childhood
* Urban and rural childhoods
* Intersections between race and childhood
* Indigenous childhoods
* Gender and childhood
* Childhood and trauma
* Narratives of childhood
* Parent-child relations
Submission Guidelines
Proposals should include:
- Paper title
- 250-word abstract
- Biography of 50-100 words
- 2-page CV
Deadline: 31 December 2012; notification of acceptance: 14 January 2013
Submissions should be sent to:
shirleene.robinson@mq.edu.au and simon.sleight@kcl.ac.uk
Showing posts with label childhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label childhood. Show all posts
Monday, 10 December 2012
Wednesday, 13 June 2012
New Zealand Studies Network: Kids in the City
The New Zealand Studies Association (UK & Ireland) is pleased to announce
"Kids in the City"
A lecture by Dr Penelope Carroll, Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand
Tuesday 19th June 2012 at 6 p.m.
Birkbeck, University of London, Malet St (Room 612)
Dr Carroll will talk on her team’s study of children in inner city Auckland, New Zealand, on how different neighbourhoods are experienced by children and parents. Interviews have been conducted with primary school children aged 9 to 11 from schools in six urban neighbourhoods
The study is catalysed by decreasing physical activity, rising obesity, over monitoring of children, and urban intensification.The children were given a GPS and accelerometer, and they kept a travel diary of where they went.
Penelope Carroll, MA (Politics), Grad Dip Psychology, Post Grad Dip Cognitive Therapy, PhD (Health Sciences) is a researcher in public health at SHORE and Whariki Research Centre, School of Public Health, Massey University, Auckland. She obtained her PhD in health sciences from Otago University (Wellington, New Zealand) and has an extensive background in media and communications. Current research activities include the interface between social science research and policy, housing and health inequalities and the well-being of children in urban environments
For booking and details email info.nzsn@gmail.com
"Kids in the City"
A lecture by Dr Penelope Carroll, Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand
Tuesday 19th June 2012 at 6 p.m.
Birkbeck, University of London, Malet St (Room 612)
Dr Carroll will talk on her team’s study of children in inner city Auckland, New Zealand, on how different neighbourhoods are experienced by children and parents. Interviews have been conducted with primary school children aged 9 to 11 from schools in six urban neighbourhoods
The study is catalysed by decreasing physical activity, rising obesity, over monitoring of children, and urban intensification.The children were given a GPS and accelerometer, and they kept a travel diary of where they went.
Penelope Carroll, MA (Politics), Grad Dip Psychology, Post Grad Dip Cognitive Therapy, PhD (Health Sciences) is a researcher in public health at SHORE and Whariki Research Centre, School of Public Health, Massey University, Auckland. She obtained her PhD in health sciences from Otago University (Wellington, New Zealand) and has an extensive background in media and communications. Current research activities include the interface between social science research and policy, housing and health inequalities and the well-being of children in urban environments
For booking and details email info.nzsn@gmail.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)