Young people as global citizens: Negotiation of youth civic participation in adult-managed online spaces

Author(s): Manisha Pathak-Shelat, Kiran V. Bhatia

Year of publication: 2019

Keywords: Youth civic participation, Global citizenship, Adult-managed online spaces, Negotiation strategies, Civic engagement

Methodology/Sample: Interviews/20 young bloggers

Reference: Pathak-Shelat, M., & Bhatia, K. V. (2019). Young people as global citizens: negotiation of youth civic participation in adult-managed online spaces. Journal of youth studies, 22(1), 87-107. https://doi.org/10.1080/13676261.2018.1483074

Abstract

With the proliferation of new media technologies, online spaces for civic engagement are being used as new sites by the young people for enacting global citizenship. Some of these online civic spaces are managed by parent organizations and guide the participants towards accomplishing goals that align with the institutional policies. We use Stuart Hall’s theoretical framework to ground the two methods we used for empirical research- textual analysis of the selected online spaces and in-depth interviews with young bloggers. Our analysis shows how negotiated reading of the encoded messages on the online platforms for youth civic engagement marks a political moment of signification in which there lies a possibility of challenging the dominance of the adult centered notions of civic engagement. Shelat’s online civic culture framework [2014. “Citizens, Global Civic Engagement on Online Platforms: Women as Transcultural Citizens.” Dissertation] helped us examine how these managed platforms encode global citizenship with pre-designed participatory practices that reinforce the hegemonic definition of youth political participation. Interviews of young bloggers on two online global spaces foreground the process of negotiation with the dominant definitions and the use of decoding strategies to create scope for subjective, more local definitions, as well as practices of civic engagement and global citizenship. Though literature suggests that adult-management of online youth spaces perpetuate a gap between the adult-centric notions of participation and the youth oriented ideas of civic engagement, our study reveals that the young participants find ways of articulating their ideas and enter these spaces with plans on how to fulfill their civic goals.

> Summary

  • The paper explores how online civic spaces enable youth to enact global citizenship through managed participation.
  • It highlights the importance of adult guidance in fostering youth engagement and expression.
  • The study reveals that young bloggers negotiate their civic goals within adult-centric frameworks.
  • It emphasizes the role of moderated spaces in promoting safe and supportive communities for youth.
  • The research utilizes textual analysis and interviews to understand youth interactions in these online platforms.

> Problem statement

  • The paper discusses how online civic spaces are managed, influencing youth engagement and global citizenship through institutional policies.
  • It highlights the exclusion of youth lacking linguistic competencies, reinforcing socio-economic and racial stratification.
  • The challenges of linking local issues to global narratives in managed platforms are emphasized.
  • The paper critiques the adult-centric definitions of civic engagement that overshadow youth-oriented ideas.
  • It also addresses the suppression of crucial details in discourse through over-lexicalization techniques.

> Methods used

  • The paper employs textual analysis of online content from YouThink and Voices of Youth platforms.
  • In-depth interviews with 20 young bloggers were conducted to gather qualitative data.
  • The study utilizes Stuart Hall’s theoretical framework to analyze the data.
  • A semi-structured interview guideline was designed based on literature and study goals.
  • Thematic coding was used to analyze interview transcripts for negotiation strategies.
  • The research incorporates both etic and emic perspectives in its methodology.

> Practical implications

  • Managed online civic spaces enhance youth engagement by providing resources and guidance for global citizenship activities.
  • These platforms help young people develop civic competencies and global networks within a safe environment.
  • The study highlights the importance of negotiating adult management to fulfill personal civic goals.
  • Digital citizenship programs can reduce online bullying and foster respectful online interactions among youth.
  • Young bloggers utilize these spaces to articulate local experiences within global discourses, enriching discussions.

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