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ID190767
Title ProperOn the shifting (ir)relevance of national and ethnic identifications in urban children’s everyday lives
LanguageENG
AuthorKostet, Imane
Summary / Abstract (Note)Based on three rounds of in-depth interviews, this article discusses the various ways in which children negotiate ethnic and national identities in a majority-minority city. I examine which identity labels children identify with, which relevance they attach to those labels, how they define these inclusively or exclusively and what these labels reveal about their senses of belonging. Children negotiate identity in myriad and creative ways and, while doing so, challenge public and political discourses by creating inclusive categories which transcend ethnic or national boundaries. I further show how, approximately 20 months after the first research round, the children retrospectively reflect on their self-identifications, may alter their initially chosen identity labels, and critically question the importance they once attached to those identities. The results contribute to a deeper understanding of children’s reflexivity and agency while dealing with their identity in a super-diverse environment.
`In' analytical NoteIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 30, No.4; Aug 2023: p.529-548
Journal SourceIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 2023-08 30, 4
Key WordsEthnic Identity ;  Belonging ;  Dual Identities ;  Boundary-Making ;  Super-diversity ;  Children’s Reflexivity