The book critically examines psycho-educational developmental interventions that arguably contribute to 'Positive Youth Development', especially for marginalized youth conceived to be at-risk. Tracing the growth and circulation of these programmes from the Global North to the Global South, the book shows how these interventions seek to cultivate youth as entrepreneurial citizens who can cater to global developmental agendas. Using Life Skills Education programmes in India as an illustration, the book locates these programmes within the larger context of neoliberalization of education and training globally through programmes for social-emotional learning, personality, employability, and vocational skills.
It shows how such programmes cultivate an ethic of self-responsibility among 'youth at-risk', to overcome structural disadvantages by working upon themselves. However, sociocultural disconnects and youth agencies that emerge during programme implementation do not allow for straightforward replication of global neoliberal agendas. Closely examining the outcomes of programmes on youth, the book presents alternative agendas that can be truly empowering for young people in the Global South. Educators, policymakers, scholars, and students working in the areas of education, childhood and youth studies, development studies, and psychology benefit from the book's in-depth analysis of young people's expectations of education and developmental interventions, and how these programmes impact young people's lives.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
"Are 'skill-training' and 'personality development' programmes adequate to cater to youth who are caught in the interstices of disembedding societies and economies? Maithreyi's nuanced and critical study highlights the challenges of such education transactions and calls for the need for programs that combine individual needs with structural orientation. An indispensable book for all educators, trainers, administrators, and policy-makers."
A R Vasavi (Prof. Retd.)
Social Anthropologist
"This incisive book offers a powerful critique of psycho-educational interventions that target marginalised young people, especially under the guise of 'empowerment'. Showing how such education programmes travel from the Global North to the Global South, Maithreyi excavates their prevalence and workings in the Indian context through the case study of 'life skills education'. Through original ethnographic research, the book reveals how such programmes expect young people to 'work on the self', and in doing so, fail to acknowledge, much less address, the structural nature of the injustices that young people face. This book offers compelling evidence for a radical rethinking of education reform - exposing the deep harms that underpin existing modes of so-called 'empowerment'."
Arathi Sriprakash (Professor of Sociology and Education)
University of Oxford
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Postgraduate
Illustrationen
2 s/w Tabellen, 2 s/w Zeichnungen, 2 s/w Abbildungen
2 Tables, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Illustrations, black and white
Maße
Höhe: 234 mm
Breite: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-041-14410-6 (9781041144106)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
R. Maithreyi is a critical childhood studies and education scholar, focusing on youth in the Global South. She currently works at Karnataka Health Promotion Trust, Bengaluru. Her previous books include Educating Youth: Regulation through Psychosocial Skilling in India (2021) and Modernity, Schooling, and Childhood in India: Trajectories of Exclusion (2022).
Autor*in
Karnataka Health Promotion Trust, India
Acknowledgements xii
1 Introduction - Global Agendas Around Youth and
Neoliberal Development 1
1.0 Conceptions of Youth 1
1.1 Harnessing the Youth Dividend: Regulation and 'Responsibilization' of Youth 5
1.2 Navigating Youthhood 7
1.3 About This Book 13
2 The 'Psy Complex' and Development Work with Youth 18
2.0 The 'Psy-Sciences' and New Forms of Governance 18
2.1 PYD and Entrepreneurial Youth 20
2.2 PYD and the Proliferation of Governance 25
3 LSE for 'Enterprise' or 'Educational Reform'? 30
3.0 The Generalization of Psycho-Education and Youth Development: The Indian Context 30
3.1 LSE - A Genealogical Examination 33
3.1.1 The Self-Help and Skills Revolution within Psychology 36
3.2 Emergence and Circulation in the Indian Context 39
3.2.1 The Targets of Life Skills Interventions 42
4 A Range of Actors in Indian Education 46
4.0 A Range of Actors and the Intent of Life Skilling 46
4.1 Life Skills Programmes as 'Global Middle-Class' Cultural Capital 48
4.1.1 Imagine Possibilities 50
4.1.2 Viveka Youth Brigade 53
4.1.3 Media for Change Limited 55
5 Technologies of Self - LSE and the Shaping of the Entrepreneurial Self 60
Diary Entry: February 17, 2012; 5:30-7:00 am, Eidgah Maidan, Bengaluru 60
5.0 A Pedagogy for Discipline 60
5.1 The Pedagogic Format of LSE 61
5.1.1 Participation, and the Practices of 'Care', Confession, and 'Visibilization' 63
5.1.2 Role of Language within the Programmes 67
5.1.3 Modulation of Body Rhythm, Mood, and Behaviour 71
6 Curricular Agendas, Classroom Transactions, and Social Reproduction of Youth Identities 77
The Story of 'Warm Fuzzies' and 'Cold Pricklies' 77
6.0 Classroom Agendas and the Reconstruction of Youth Selves 77
6.1 Meeting the Expectations of Schools 78
6.2 Meeting the Ends of Donors and Funders 82
6.3 Meeting the Middle-Class Vision of Development 85
6.4 Meeting the Patriarchal Expectations of Society 88
6.5 The Entrepreneurial Self: Educated but De-Skilled and Malleable 91
7 Cultural Disconnects and Youth Formations Through Enterprise and Social Reproduction 95
7.0 Field Realities and the Outcomes of LSE Programmes 95
7.0.1 Students' Account of LSE 95
7.0.2 LSE and the Affordances of Better Education 98
7.0.3 Facilitators and the Production of a New Professional Status 101
7.0.4 'Managers' and the Production of 'Distinction' 107
8 Psycho-Regulation Programmes and 'Strategic Opportunizing': Theorizing the Possibilities: Youth Identity Formations 113
8.0 Local Contexts, Global Discourses, and 'Cultural Disconnects': Understanding the Responses to
Psychosocial Interventions 113
8.1 LSE and Middle-Class Cultural Capital 113
8.1.1 The TTP by IP 114
8.1.2 Lava Pit and Fissures within Team Dynamics 117
8.2 Class, Self, and Habitus 121
8.3 Governmentality, Power, and the Possibilities for Resistance 123
8.4 'Strategic Opportunism' and the (Re)Production of Youth Identities 125
9 Conclusion 129
9.0 Developmentalism and Education 129
9.1 Youth Aspirations, Appropriations, and Resistances 130
9.2 Alternative Possibilities and Social Transformation Through LSE Programmes 132
Appendices 137
List of Abbreviations 143
References 144
Index 160