11 results on '"Rosemary Butler"'
Search Results
2. Interrogating race, unsettling whiteness: concepts of transitions, enterprise and mobilities in Australian youth studies
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Sherene Idriss, Anita Harris, and Rosemary Butler
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White (horse) ,Sociology and Political Science ,Mobilities ,05 social sciences ,General Social Sciences ,Gender studies ,Youth studies ,0506 political science ,Race (biology) ,050903 gender studies ,050602 political science & public administration ,Sociology ,0509 other social sciences ,Life-span and Life-course Studies - Abstract
This paper interrogates how three key concepts in youth studies – ‘transitions’, ‘the enterprising self’ and ‘mobilities’ – have historically centred the experiences of white/Anglo young people in ...
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- 2021
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3. Youth, mobilities and multicultures in the rural Anglosphere: positioning a research agenda
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Rosemary Butler
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Cultural Studies ,Economic growth ,Sociology and Political Science ,Mobilities ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Ethnic studies ,05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,1. No poverty ,Ethnic group ,Livelihood ,Racism ,0506 political science ,Rurality ,Anthropology ,Political science ,11. Sustainability ,050602 political science & public administration ,050703 geography ,Diversity (politics) ,media_common - Abstract
Rural mobilities have transformed the social composition of rural places across the Global North. Young people are central to these changes and their role in rural livelihoods is crucial to rural f...
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- 2020
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4. ‘They try to avoid.’ How do parents’ feelings about ethnicised and classed differences shape gentrifying school communities?
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Christina Ho, Eve Vincent, and Rosemary Butler
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White (horse) ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,Ethnic group ,050301 education ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Gender studies ,Entitlement ,Interpersonal communication ,Gentrification ,Negotiation ,Feeling ,Multiculturalism ,Sociology ,050703 geography ,0503 education ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd This article reports on interview-based research into the everyday consequences of gentrification as seen through the prism of local public primary schools in inner Sydney, Australia. We explore the feelings involved in negotiating relations across ethnicised and classed differences within four school communities. Common though contradictory themes across the interviews include: the positive worth accorded to contact with ethnicised difference among white parents; the avoidance of interpersonal contact across ethnicised and classed differences; and the positive worth accorded to classed sameness. Our research finds that the feelings that attend to these themes—discomfort and comfort, desire and disdain—play a significant role in shaping everyday school communities and relationships between parents. We examine the ways in which white parents’ desires for social contact with ethnicised others are frequently disappointed and note the disdain and discomfort involved in negotiating contact with classed others. We conclude with a case study involving a complex mix of the themes and feelings listed above: parental engagement with the schools’ Parents and Citizens Associations (P&Cs). We argue that P&Cs constitute social spaces dominated by parents with a class-based disposition towards entitlement and authority, from which ethnicised and classed others frequently feel excluded.
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- 2017
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5. Asian migration and education cultures in the Anglo-sphere
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Christina Ho, Rosemary Butler, and Megan Watkins
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Essentialism ,Ethnic studies ,05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,Ethnic group ,Gender studies ,0506 political science ,Asian studies ,Learning styles ,Competition (economics) ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,050602 political science & public administration ,Sociology ,Social science ,050703 geography ,Demography - Abstract
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Asian migration is transforming education cultures in the Anglo-sphere. This is epitomised in the mounting debates about ‘tiger mothers’ and ‘dragon children’, and competition and segregation in schools. Anxiety and aspiration within these spaces are increasingly ethnicised, with children of Asian migrants both admired and resented for their educational success. This paper presents some frameworks for understanding how Asian migration both shapes and impacts upon education outcomes, systems and cultures, focusing on Australia, the U.S., the U.K. and Canada. It challenges the cultural essentialism that prevails in academic and popular discussion of ‘Asian success’, arguing that educational behaviour cannot be reduced to ethnic categories, whether these are ethnic ‘learning styles’ (e.g. the ‘Chinese learner’) or ‘cultural’ family practices (e.g. ‘Confucian parenting’). In also presenting an overview of papers in this special issue, this introduction showcases the explanatory models offered by our authors, which locate Asian migrants within broader social, historical and geo-political contexts. This includes global markets and national policies around migration and education, classed trajectories and articulations, local formations of ‘ethnic capital’, and transnational assemblages that produce education and mobility as means for social advancement. These are the broader contexts within which education cultures are produced.
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- 2017
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6. Local and refugee youth in rural Australia
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Rosemary Butler
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Negotiation ,Rurality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Refugee ,Multiculturalism ,Situated ,Social change ,Gender studies ,Sociology ,Prejudice ,Racism ,media_common - Abstract
Young people from refugee backgrounds are increasingly settling in Australia’s transforming rural communities. This chapter is concerned with how we frame our understanding of diverse young people’s negotiation of intercultural relationships within such rural places of social change. An argument is set forth for the importance of everyday multicultural frameworks situated in place, as well as theories of rurality and class culture in making sense of convivialities, commonalities, prejudice and racism among diverse rural youth. This has implications for how we understand the work of belonging among youth coming of age in rural communities.
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- 2019
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7. Children making sense of economic insecurity: Facework, fairness and belonging
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Rosemary Butler
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060101 anthropology ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Face negotiation theory ,Face (sociological concept) ,Gender studies ,Context (language use) ,06 humanities and the arts ,General Medicine ,050906 social work ,Feeling ,Order (exchange) ,Ethnography ,0601 history and archaeology ,Narrative ,Sociology ,0509 other social sciences ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
This article contributes to our understanding of how children cope with economic insecurity in affluent nations. Based on research with children and adults in regional Australia, it argues for the importance of cultural narratives in making sense of children’s strategies to cope with financial hardship. Drawing on Goffman’s concept of ‘facework’, and recent analysis by Pugh, it analyses the complex forms of facework that children use to manage situations of economic insecurity and shows how such practices may be anchored in cultural narratives of ‘fairness’. Goffman’s ‘facework’ refers to the expressive order required to save face, a term used to signify how we participate in a social regime, particularly when we perform unexpected feelings. In this article, the author develops a theoretical framework to analyse three types of facework used by children from low-income families in this Australian context, and coins these practices ‘going without’, ‘cutting down’, and ‘staying within’. Through such facework, children sought to maintain inclusion and uphold dignity, practices which were increasingly difficult amidst rising inequality. This raised contradictions in belonging and acceptance among others, particularly for children from refugee backgrounds.
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- 2016
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8. Local Kids, ‘Refugees’ and Publics of Privilege: Children’s Mediated and Intercultural Lives in a Regional Australian City
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Rosemary Butler
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Cultural Studies ,History ,Sociology and Political Science ,Cultural identity ,Refugee ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,Gender studies ,Morality ,Racism ,0506 political science ,Multiculturalism ,050602 political science & public administration ,Narrative ,Sociology ,050703 geography ,Privilege (social inequality) ,media_common ,Interculturalism - Abstract
This paper considers contradictions and complexities around mediated and intercultural relationships between local children, primarily of Anglo-Australian descent, and ‘refugees’, in a regional Australian primary school community. It examines two different spaces in which local children engage with asylum seekers on a daily basis – the prolific ’speech communities‘ around refugees which circulate in public culture, and lived practices of ’everyday multiculturalism‘. Young people are shown to draw on negative tropes around ‘refugees’ to anchor themselves in a local cultural order. These speech communities, however, differ significantly from the forms of everyday multiculturalism which take place between local children and asylum-seeker youth. This raises questions about how narratives around refugees, privilege and morality become embedded in local cultural identities, and what this might mean for children’s attempts to belong within such contexts. These practices are discussed here through long-te...
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- 2016
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9. Schools, ‘ferals’, stigma and boundary work: parents managing education and uncertainty in regional Australia
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Rosemary Butler
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Cultural Studies ,Economic growth ,Middle class ,Resentment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Stigma (botany) ,Social class ,Education ,Gender Studies ,Negotiation ,Economic inequality ,Sociology ,Boundary-work ,Social science ,media_common ,Qualitative research - Abstract
This paper examines forms of boundary work undertaken by parents in a regional Australian city to negotiate social processes around the school market amidst rising economic insecurity. It outlines structural changes, which have increased economic inequality in Australia and impacted on educational reform, and the specific challenges faced by public schools in regional settings. Drawing on 18 months’ qualitative research in one regional location, it identifies and analyses forms of boundary work undertaken by middle-class families to manage these uncertainties in a field of scarce economic and cultural resources. Theories of class culture, stigma and whiteness are used to show how local social labels such as ‘ferals’ and ‘shiny people’ acted as classed and racialised ways of negotiating this social and economic landscape through the school field. Such practices engendered feelings of security and control and shed light on feelings of class-based resentment and anxiety in regional Australia, specifically a ...
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- 2015
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10. Images of the child and environmental risk: Australian news photography of children and natural disasters, 2010–2011
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Rosemary Butler
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Cultural Studies ,Late modernity ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,Global warming ,Photography ,Media studies ,Metropolitan area ,Extreme weather ,Anthropology ,Global network ,Journalism ,Sociology ,Social science ,Natural disaster - Abstract
Images of children appeared frequently in Australian metropolitan news reporting on the series of extreme weather events and natural disasters that occurred in Australia and the Asia-Pacific region between September 2010 and April 2011. This article examines these photographs and pictures as a case study through which to comment on relationships between public image worlds of children and globalised visual cultures of risk in late modernity. The author discusses the Australian news coverage of these events alongside the public uncertainty generated by discourses on global climate change. She draws attention to the frequent emphasis on children in this news reporting to narrate the stories of families and communities, and considers the historical relationship between images of the child and natural disasters in news journalism. Drawing on theories of risk, the author then examines the global networks of images of risk within which these pictures of children circulate. This is contextualised alongside Weste...
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- 2013
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11. Indigenous small businesses in the Australian Indigenous economy
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Mark Morrison, Parikshit Basu, Rosemary Butler, Jock Collins, Branka Krivokapic-Skoko, and Sanders, W
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Economic growth ,Business ,Indigenous - Published
- 2016
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