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Youth, Social Justice, and Communities (YSJC)
Anthropology
and Education
Toward a Strategy for Effective Youth Policy
This project contributes to robust theory building and effective
policy making for understanding how social justice practices intersect
with youth development for youth in working class communities of
color. This project is guided by three overarching goals. First,
the project establishes a community of scholars who convene annually
to develop a multi-disciplinary research agenda to study the relationship
among youth, social justice, and urban communities. By connecting
junior and senior level scholars with a common set of research questions
and conceptual frameworks, the national convening establishes a
network of scholars engaged in the study of social justice and youth
development. Second, the project supports empirical research that
examines how youth of color respond to constraints in their communities
that impede their healthy development. By documenting a broad array
of social justice strategies and organizational practices in schools,
communities, and religious organizations, this project advances
youth development theory with a richer understanding of how young
people transform their communities to improve their own quality
of life. Such activities might include community organizing, participatory
action research, political education, popular theater, marches,
and other forms of civic engagement. Third, the project identifies
promising strategies for supporting youth and encourages local and
national stakeholders to integrate these strategies into policy
making. Policy and practice briefs will be distributed to local
youth serving organizations and policy makers followed by briefings
which will be held in the San Francisco Bay Area, Chicago, Atlanta
and Washington DC.
©BARA - The Bureau of Applied Research
in Anthropology |
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