by Rocío Fatyass, Illustrator: Paulina Ferronato | Sep 22, 2021 | blog, childhood’s refusals, Español
| >English | En este ensayo me interesa abordar los ambivalentes sentidos del rechazo. Por un lado, lo defino como práctica moral, en el terreno de las exclusiones, releyendo a McGranahan (2016) quien señala que el rechazo desafía toda relación jerárquica. Por otro,...
by Rocío Fatyass, Illustrator: Paulina Ferronato, Translation: Andrea Cortés Saavedra | Sep 22, 2021 | blog, childhood’s refusals
| >Español | In this piece, I am interested in addressing the ambivalent meanings of the concept of refusal. On the one hand, I define refusal as a moral practice located in a social field of exclusions. In that sense, I seek to re-read McGranahan’s (2016)...
by Franziska Fay | Jun 23, 2021 | blog, childhood’s refusals
> English Katika insha hii, nilitumia maoni ya watoto juu ya hatua dhidi ya adhabu ya upigaji bakora iliyotekelezwa katika skuli kumi za majaribio kwenye muktadha wa mradi wa ulinzi wa mtoto ulioendeshwa na jumuiya ya Save the Children pamoja na serikali ya...
by Franziska Fay | Jun 23, 2021 | blog, childhood’s refusals
> Swahili In this photo essay I draw on children’s feedback on measures against corporal punishment implemented in ten pilot schools of a child protection programme run collaboratively by Save the Children and the local government in Zanzibar. In order to collect...
by Francesca Bernardi | Jun 11, 2021 | blog, slow violence
Creativity, ableism and slow violence: A short introduction. My contribution to this conversation is a response to the spark generated by the possibility and scope of applying a ‘slow violence reading’ to the study of childhood (Spyrou, 2021) and, in particular, to...
by Macarena García-González, Justyna Deszcz-Tryhubczak | May 18, 2021 | blog, slow violence
Español | Polskie Associating children’s literature with slow violence may cause surprise: after all, Nixon’s concept usually unmasks injustices concerning environmental degradation. However, it has enabled us to address our increasing sense of being implicated in...