Peripheral Creativities
Youth, Arts and Public Policies in Segregated Territories
Emerald Publishing Limited
Will be published approx. on 1. October 2026
Book
Hardback
276 pages
978-1-83742-285-2 (ISBN)
Description
In a context of polycrisis and lack of opportunities for youth emancipation, it is vital to understand the socio-economic conditions, life experiences, practices, and social representations of young people from disadvantaged backgrounds. Peripheral Creativities examines the intersection of urban segregation, creative practices, and public policy in understanding marginalised youth living in peripheral territories.
Bringing together contributions from sociologists, anthropologists, and other social science scholars across three continents, this edited volume addresses how creativity is mobilised by young people from urban peripheral neighbourhoods, as well as their influence on the (re)definition of public policy targeting them. Developed within the PERICREATIVITY project based in Portugal, the book combines insights from PERICREATIVITY researchers with contributions from scholars working in other parts of the world, offering diverse contexts and perspectives on peripheral youth while highlighting the growing significance of artistic practices in the construction of positive identities and in the subversion of dominant stereotypes. The volume further shows how these creative practices have also been appropriated by the state as instruments of urban governance, linked to agendas of youth participation, local development, and social inclusion.
Advancing knowledge on youth creativity in segregated territories and on public policy, the book pays particular attention to urban segregation, social marginalisation, and structural inequality.
Bringing together contributions from sociologists, anthropologists, and other social science scholars across three continents, this edited volume addresses how creativity is mobilised by young people from urban peripheral neighbourhoods, as well as their influence on the (re)definition of public policy targeting them. Developed within the PERICREATIVITY project based in Portugal, the book combines insights from PERICREATIVITY researchers with contributions from scholars working in other parts of the world, offering diverse contexts and perspectives on peripheral youth while highlighting the growing significance of artistic practices in the construction of positive identities and in the subversion of dominant stereotypes. The volume further shows how these creative practices have also been appropriated by the state as instruments of urban governance, linked to agendas of youth participation, local development, and social inclusion.
Advancing knowledge on youth creativity in segregated territories and on public policy, the book pays particular attention to urban segregation, social marginalisation, and structural inequality.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Bingley
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-83742-285-2 (9781837422852)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Otavio Raposo is a Research Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at the Iscte-University Institute of Lisbon and Centre for Research and Studies in Sociology, Portugal.
Ligia Ferro is Professor of Sociology at the Faculty of Arts and Humanities and a researcher at the Institute of Sociology of the University of Porto, Portugal.
Pedro Varela is an anthropologist and landscape architect. He is Researcher at the Centre for Research and Studies in Sociology at Iscte-University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal.
Ligia Ferro is Professor of Sociology at the Faculty of Arts and Humanities and a researcher at the Institute of Sociology of the University of Porto, Portugal.
Pedro Varela is an anthropologist and landscape architect. He is Researcher at the Centre for Research and Studies in Sociology at Iscte-University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal.
Editor
ISCTE - University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal
University of Porto, Portugal
ISCTE - University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal
Content
Foreword; Maggie O'Neill
Introduction; Otavio Raposo, Ligia Ferro, and Pedro Varela
Pericreativities
Chapter 1. Youth Citizenship, Artistic and Creative Practices and Technological Mediations; Ricardo Campos
Chapter 2. Peripheral Youth, Collective Creativity, and the Making of "Sounds of a Revolution"; Alix Didier Sarrouy
Chapter 3. Hip-Hop Culture and the Affirmation of Thug Identity: a Reading from Cape Verdean Gangsta Rap; Redy Wilson Lima
Periurbans
Chapter 4. Counter-imaginaries of Globalisation in Latin-American Urban Margins; Apoena Mano and Talja Blokland
Chapter 5. The Social Value of Urban Art: Participation, Community and Territory in Latin America; Ricardo Klein
Chapter 6. A Light in the Neighbourhood: The Revitalising Potential of a Library in a Peripheral Area of Madrid; Rebeca Munoz Garcia and M. Victoria Gomez Garcia
Chapter 7. Doubly Peripheral: Schooling Processes for Children and Young People Living in Amadora's Segregated Contexts; Sandra Mateus and Teresa Seabra
Chapter 8. Living Under the Same Stigma: From Living in "Shanties" to Living in the "Neighbourhood"; Rita Avila Cachado
Peripolitics
Chapter 9. Youth and Arts Strategy: A Discourse Analysis of English Cultural Policy; Frances Howard
Chapter 10. Socioeducational Policies to Young People in Peripheral Areas: International Trends and the Portuguese Case; Pedro Abrantes
Chapter 11. Intersectionality and Cultural Policies: A Critical Reading of the Programme "Art and Urban Peripheries"; Joao Teixeira Lopes
Chapter 12. From the Cultural Collective to Social Work: Ambiguities Between Work and Activism; Joao Rodrigo V. Martins, Livia De Tommasi, and Silvio Rogerio dos Santos
Chapter 13. Insurgent Institutionalisation: Peripheral Youth Aesthetic Production in Sao Paulo; Alexandre Barbosa Pereira
Introduction; Otavio Raposo, Ligia Ferro, and Pedro Varela
Pericreativities
Chapter 1. Youth Citizenship, Artistic and Creative Practices and Technological Mediations; Ricardo Campos
Chapter 2. Peripheral Youth, Collective Creativity, and the Making of "Sounds of a Revolution"; Alix Didier Sarrouy
Chapter 3. Hip-Hop Culture and the Affirmation of Thug Identity: a Reading from Cape Verdean Gangsta Rap; Redy Wilson Lima
Periurbans
Chapter 4. Counter-imaginaries of Globalisation in Latin-American Urban Margins; Apoena Mano and Talja Blokland
Chapter 5. The Social Value of Urban Art: Participation, Community and Territory in Latin America; Ricardo Klein
Chapter 6. A Light in the Neighbourhood: The Revitalising Potential of a Library in a Peripheral Area of Madrid; Rebeca Munoz Garcia and M. Victoria Gomez Garcia
Chapter 7. Doubly Peripheral: Schooling Processes for Children and Young People Living in Amadora's Segregated Contexts; Sandra Mateus and Teresa Seabra
Chapter 8. Living Under the Same Stigma: From Living in "Shanties" to Living in the "Neighbourhood"; Rita Avila Cachado
Peripolitics
Chapter 9. Youth and Arts Strategy: A Discourse Analysis of English Cultural Policy; Frances Howard
Chapter 10. Socioeducational Policies to Young People in Peripheral Areas: International Trends and the Portuguese Case; Pedro Abrantes
Chapter 11. Intersectionality and Cultural Policies: A Critical Reading of the Programme "Art and Urban Peripheries"; Joao Teixeira Lopes
Chapter 12. From the Cultural Collective to Social Work: Ambiguities Between Work and Activism; Joao Rodrigo V. Martins, Livia De Tommasi, and Silvio Rogerio dos Santos
Chapter 13. Insurgent Institutionalisation: Peripheral Youth Aesthetic Production in Sao Paulo; Alexandre Barbosa Pereira