Universität Wien

210017 PS D3/G10/Englisch: Childhood and generational order (2005W)

Childhood and generational order - social, economic and political perspectives on childhood. Lehrveranstaltung in englischer Sprache (D3/G10)

0.00 ECTS (2.00 SWS), SPL 21 - Politikwissenschaft
Continuous assessment of course work

Ort/ Where: Hs. 29 HG,
Zeit/ When: Wednesday 17.30 - 19.00,
ERSTMALS AM/ FIRST SESSION: Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2005
Computeranmeldung ist erforderlich: www.pri.univie.ac.at/piswi,
In englischer Sprache!

Details

max. 40 participants
Language: English

Lecturers

Classes

Currently no class schedule is known.

Information

Aims, contents and method of the course

Childhood may be considered either individually as transitional developmental stage of human beings or as a structural divide, which generates (and singles out for special treatment) the population group referred to as children (as distinct from adults). Generational relations may be considered either at the level if the family as relationships between relatives (e.g. children, parents or grandparents) or at the level of society as relations between population groups of different age (e.g. children, adults and/ or old age).
In this seminar, both childhood and generational relations will be approached at the level of society. This means children are considered as a population group of its own, childhood as a social category, and generational relations as generational (or age) order of society, adding thereby a further dimension to traditional, Marxist and feminist approaches focusing on social class or gender respectively, namely generation or age.
The range of topics dealt with in the seminar is to some extent open and flexible; it will depend also on priorities and interests of students attending. However, the generational division of labour (child labour and children's work), the generational distribution of resources (child poverty), the generational order of welfare states (child-centred public financial transfer systems and social services), as well as the generational distribution of power (children's political participation) will be the main areas to be investigated more in detail.

Assessment and permitted materials

Minimum requirements and assessment criteria

Examination topics

In the first part of the seminar I will introduce the basic conceptual framework referred to in the first two paragraphs above (childhood as a social category, generational relations etc.). Afterwards we will agree about the use of the rest of the time, which will be reserved predominantly for oral presentations by students as well as for discussions and debates. Students attending are expected to make an oral presentation as well as to hand in a short paper, both in English.

Reading list

Esping-Andersen Gøsta: Why we need a new welfare state. Oxford University Press 2002
Jensen An-Magritt et al. (eds): Children's Welfare in Ageing Europe - Volumes I-II. Norwegian Centre for Child Research/ NTNU, Trondheim 2004
Qvortrup Jens (ed.): Studies in Modern Childhood: Society, Agency and Culture. Palgrave Macmillan, London 2005 (forthcoming)

Association in the course directory

Last modified: Fr 31.08.2018 08:53