Fr. 104.00

Childhood, Youth Identity, and Violence in Formerly Displaced Communities in Uganda

English · Hardback

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Description

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This volume provides a critical assessment of the mainstream western childhood constructions and their impact to the developing world. Using African feminist and indigenous epistemological frameworks, the volume decolonizes the understanding of childhood, children, and youth. Specifically, the volume presents Global South contestations to mainstream western constructions by exploring alternative notions to standardized universal understanding of childhood. The author further deliberates childhood as a human right, exploring how armed violence hinders realization of such rights assessing humanitarian assistance during armed violence. Besides childhood, the volume explores the complex intersectional nature of youthhood and its cultural relevance to formerly displaced communities and how this manifests in access to and use of humanitarian assistance. 

List of contents

Chapter 1. Childhood and Armed Violence.- Chapter 2. The Construction of Childhood.- Chapter 3. Local Perceptions Of Childhood, Youthhood And Adulthood.- Chapter 4. We Are What We Are Not.- Chapter 5. Girlhood, Violence And Humanitarian Assistance.- Chapter 6. Young People's Agency And Resilience.- Chapter 7. Conclusion And Recommendations.

About the author

Victoria Flavia Namuggala is Lecturer at the School of Women and Gender Studies, Makerere University, Uganda. She holds a PhD in Gender Studies from Arizona State University, USA. Namuggala has published around childhood and youthhood, armed violence and displacement, and gender issues in Africa.

Summary

This volume provides a critical assessment of the mainstream western childhood constructions and their impact to the developing world. Using African feminist and indigenous epistemological frameworks, the volume decolonizes the understanding of childhood, children, and youth. Specifically, the volume presents Global South contestations to mainstream western constructions by exploring alternative notions to standardized universal understanding of childhood. The author further deliberates childhood as a human right, exploring how armed violence hinders realization of such rights assessing humanitarian assistance during armed violence. Besides childhood, the volume explores the complex intersectional nature of youthhood and its cultural relevance to formerly displaced communities and how this manifests in access to and use of humanitarian assistance. 

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