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[Commlist] New book: Youth perspectives on citizenship discourses: Navigating exclusionary public sphere rhetoric against the backdrop of ‘inclusive’ citizenship education
Mon Jun 19 09:37:25 GMT 2023
New book
Youth perspectives on citizenship discourses: Navigating exclusionary
public sphere rhetoric against the backdrop of ‘inclusive’ citizenship
education
by Dansholm, Kerenina Kezaride
https://uis.brage.unit.no/uis-xmlui/handle/11250/3065668
Description
This dissertation is an exploration of youth perceptions of citizenship
and attendant discourses. The research is situated within the Norwegian
context where the language offers two important words for citizen:
‘statsborger’ or legal citizen and ‘medborger’ or co-citizen. The
dissertation takes the inclusive discourse of citizenship education in
schools as an implicit foundational starting point, while explicitly
exploring the exclusionary rhetoric of othering visible in public
debate. The empirical data consists of group interviews with 44 students
in three 10th grade classes in three Norwegian schools. The first
article offers an analysis of how participating students discuss
membership dimensions of citizenship, drawing on the interplay of
discourse with the material to express varying degrees of inclusive and
exclusionary stances. The findings show that students in these 10th
grade classes consistently appeal to material or sensory tokens to
justify belonging or otherness, whether understood as Norwegian-ness or
legal citizenship. Paying special attention to the role of the material
(herein covering physical appearance, clothing, and audible language)
for justifying or challenging belonging allows racially and religiously
prejudiced citizenship discourse to be more clearly highlighted. The
findings in this article point to a need to set aside discomfort and
embarrassment regarding frank discussions on material aspects embedded
in racialised and exclusionary citizenship discourses in order to aid
youth in deconstructing racialised and religious prejudice. The second
article is a case study (from one school) of student discussions of
rights and responsibilities. Student participants spoke of rights as
belonging to the majority or to the minoritized Other. In line with
earlier research findings, students referenced human rights as national
rights or values, while making explicit connections between majority
rights and minority responsibilities and implicit references to the
responsibility of the majority to protect minority rights. This analysis
indicates a need in citizenship education and its adjacent field of
human rights education (HRE) for both legal literacy and a deeper
discussion of human rights. This can, for example, be achieved through a
focus on the local context so that youth may better understand minority
barriers to rights, as well as the role of the majority in issues of
social justice. The third article focuses on the two Norwegian words for
citizen: statsborger and medborger, translated in this dissertation as
legal citizen and co-citizen. The findings are analysed through the lens
of subject positions and capabilities, with the results showing that
students appropriate categories and storylines within public debate in
order to frame different citizen subject positions as either one of ‘us’
or ‘them’. Dichotomies and overlaps are also visible in descriptions of
citizen capabilities as either legal, ideal, or societal. Legal
capabilities, understood as the juridically defined rights of majority
and minority legal citizens and co-citizens, are less clear to students
and are at times obscured by societal capabilities, or the rhetoric
within public debate— such as anti-immigrant narratives—which may hinder
minority capabilities. Additionally, ideal capabilities, or democratic
values, often stand in conflict with the exclusionary rhetoric of public
debate. The main contribution which these research findings offer is
that a citizenship lens allows for a nuanced exploration of citizen
subject positions and attendant capabilities within a democracy,
including exploration of the challenges which minority citizens may
face. Being explicit about the who (subject position), what
(categories), and how (storylines) of democratic participation will
allow students a more critical understanding of citizenship (both legal
citizenship and co-citizenship) than the predominantly values-centred
discussions which are often a staple of citizenship education. The
fourth article was co-authored together with my co-interviewers, as in
the article, we explore the role of (in)visible difference, affect, and
resistance in discussions on citizenship—both for the students and for
us as researchers. In the group discussions, we found that positionality
played a central role, in framing understandings of citizenship,
belonging, and discrimination. As white researchers who also experience
(in)visible differences, we reflect on the students’ explicit
discussions of difference, as well as their reactions to our implicit
and explicitly acknowledged difference. Additional reflections are put
forth on leveraging invisible difference to create space for an
inclusive understanding of citizenship, resisting ideas of
ethno-nationalism. This discussion demonstrates the potential which
experiences with (in)visible difference have for contributing to more
inclusive understandings of citizenship—both legal citizenship and
co-citizenship. Further potential implications are that acknowledgement
of invisible difference by white majority educators may help to open
space for an understanding of difference as a citizenship resource. In
this capstone or extended summary, I explore in detail the context for
the study, map the relevant literature, discuss theory and methodology
in depth, as well as ruminate on the contributions of the dissertation
to the field. Some of the main overall findings echo those of prior
research, such as the need for a vocabulary which facilitates explicit
engagement with citizenship issues, and concretely tackles the lived
reality of both minority and majority citizenship. Specifically, by
approaching citizenship education through the lens of the concept, the
multidimensionality of citizenship can be explored while the discourses
which youth use to make sense of the concept become visible. This
dissertation highlights both youth understandings as well as
misunderstandings, and problematises not only exclusionary discourses
which frame racialised minorities in Europe as Other, but also lack of
clarity on (minority) citizen rights—which are vital for the realisation
of an inclusive and just society. Moreover, difference in all its varied
forms must not be shied away from but must be addressed directly,
positively, and as the resource which it is.
Has parts
Paper 1: Dansholm, K.K. (2022) Material Interpolations: Youth engagement
with inclusive and exclusionary citizenship discourses. Journal of
Social Sceince Education, 21(1), 77-98. DOI: 10.11576/jsse-3514
Paper 2: Dansholm, K.K. (2022) Majority rights and minority
responsibilities : young people's negotiations with human rights. Human
Rights Education Review, 4(3). DOI: 10.7577/hrer.3968
Paper 3: Dansholm, K.K. (2022) Students' understanding of legal
citizenship and co-citizenship concepts: Subject positions and
capabilities. Nordic Journal of Comparative and International Education,
6(2). DOI: 10.7577/njcie.4747
Paper 4: Dansholm, K.K., Dickstein, J., Stokmo, H.D. (2023) Visible and
invisible difference: Negotiating citizenship, affect, and resistance.
Accepted subject to minor revisions in Critical Education.
Publisher
University of Stavanger, Norway
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