Document details

Global Children, Global Media: Migration, Media and Childhood

New York: Palgrave Macmillan (2010), xii, 222 pp.

Contains bibliogr. pp. 201-217, index

ISBN 0-23050699-2

Signature commbox: 10-Children/Youth-E 2010

"This book seeks to address the complex and multi-faceted relationships between childhood, media, migration and globalisation. Our primary focus is on a specific group that has often been invisible or misrepresented in the debate: that is, migrant children. We are particularly concerned with children who have migrated in their own lifetimes – that is, first generation migrants – rather than the more established ‘ethnic minority’ communities that now exist in many parts of the world. In this respect, we are addressing an issue that is of considerable concern in contemporary public and political debate: it is an emotionally charged topic that raises challenging questions about social cohesion, nationhood, belonging and citizenship. Yet despite the intensity of these debates, the experiences and perspectives of children themselves are rarely brought to bear – except where they are portrayed as passive victims or (increasingly) as a threat. By contrast, we argue that children are often central actors in the process of migration. They are in the ‘front line’ as migrant families come to terms with their lives in their new location; and they are often the focus for parents’ fears and aspirations for the future and for the tension between cultural continuity and change. The media are frequently a crucial element in this process. Children in migrant families are likely to experience a wide range of media, from local, national, transnational and global sources." (Preface)
1 Changing spaces: Globalisation, media, identity and childhood, 1
2 We are the world? Children and migration, 29
3 Between the global and the local: oung people, media and migration, 57
4 Going global: Childhood in the age of global media, 77
5 Finding a place: Migrant children using media, 94
6 Making migrant identities: Television in children's everyday lives, 115
7 Speaking for themselves? Researching youth media production, 134
8 Picture me in: Migrant children as media makers, 157
9 Rapping all over the World: Music, Media and Intercultural Communication, 177
10 Conclusion, 195