Confiscated time: Are children allowed to manage their own time?
-
Published:2009
Maria Carmen Belloni, 2009. "Confiscated time: Are children allowed to manage their own time?", Structural, Historical, and Comparative Perspectives, Jens Qvortrup, Katherine Brown Rosier, David A. Kinney
Download citation file:
Major merits of New Childhood Sociology are that it has introduced into sociology three fundamental points: (a) studying children as social actors, contrary to the view customarily held of them; (b) defining childhood not as a transitional phase, a state that people leave behind, but as a permanent structure of society – wherein, however, constant turnover occurs, so that childhood changes over time and in different types of society (James, Jenks, & Prout, 1998; Qvortrup, 1991, 2004); (c) considering children as essential part of a historically and socially constructed relationship with adults (Alanen, 2001), following the generational perspective already indicated by Mannheim (Mannheim, 1952).
