Youth Gangs and Street Children: Culture, Nurture and Masculinity in Ethiopia

Author:   Paula Heinonen
Publisher:   Berghahn Books
Volume:   7
ISBN:  

9781782381327


Pages:   180
Publication Date:   01 June 2013
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Youth Gangs and Street Children: Culture, Nurture and Masculinity in Ethiopia


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Author:   Paula Heinonen
Publisher:   Berghahn Books
Imprint:   Berghahn Books
Volume:   7
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.90cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.249kg
ISBN:  

9781782381327


ISBN 10:   1782381325
Pages:   180
Publication Date:   01 June 2013
Audience:   General/trade ,  College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Reviews

The author's relatively long period of field work enables her to follow-up on the longer term fates of the informants. Heinonen has taken great care to gather and categorise her data and to distil it down to its essence. [It] provides a great deal of insight into the complicated ways in which urban poverty is perpetuated in the developing world - [and] serves as an abundant source for those interested in gender, especially for understanding the real-life strategies employed by Ethiopian women and children to survive in a predominantly patriarchal society, and especially for following the way maleness is constructed. * Anthropological Notebooks Richly illustrated by quotes and life histories, this is an excellent ethnography of the ways in which young people develop resilience through continual reworking of webs of care, nurturance and interaction amongst themselves and with their families - The text is well written, comprehensive and based on a rich source of empirical material that is well analyzed and interpreted. * Tatek Abebe, Norwegian Centre for Child Research, Norwegian University of Sciences and Technology, Trondheim The book is a unique study based on long - term detailed field research. The author adopts the novel approach of analyzing gender and masculinity from the perspective of children and their families and how they experience it, and in the process offers a searing and unsparing gaze on the plight of families and children living in difficult circumstances. Dr. Heinonen's findings have profound implications, not just for policy makers and NGOs but for our very conception of 'street children' and 'youth gangs'. It is a major contribution to African ethnography and gender studies. * Marieme S. Lo, PhD, University of Toronto


Overall, Heinonen must be commended for tackling the complexities of the subject matter with tenacity and evident concern for the situation and condition of the lives of the people she observes. She does well to untangle the contradictions she encounters throughout. * Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute Paula Heinonen has written a remarkable book that deserves a wide readership... Altogether I would highly recommend this book, and I hope it finds a readership well beyond the narrow disciplinary and geographical confines that scholarship from the south too often ends up in. Finally, the book underscores the value of long term, and fairly open-ended ethnographic research. * Children's Geographies The author's relatively long period of field work enables her to follow-up on the longer term fates of the informants. Heinonen has taken great care to gather and categorise her data and to distil it down to its essence. [It] provides a great deal of insight into the complicated ways in which urban poverty is perpetuated in the developing world...[and] serves as an abundant source for those interested in gender, especially for understanding the real-life strategies employed by Ethiopian women and children to survive in a predominantly patriarchal society, and especially for following the way maleness is constructed. * Anthropological Notebooks Heinonen's cultural analysis of shame and her definition of a 'wider Ethiopian culture'... open up an interesting methodological discussion on the relation between culture and practice, ethnographical analysis and cultural representation ...Her work is an important start for an ethnography of the street, street dynamics and urban marginality - a contribution that the academic literature on Ethiopia has lacked until now. * Africa: The Journal of the International African Institute The book constitutes an important contribution to ethnography, not only for its methodology but for the coherent analysis of the detailed empirical work used in this this excellent study of street children and youth gangs. * Revista Espanola de Sociologia The contents of the chapters ...focus on impressive personal stories, while at the same time interpreting the social and cultural meanings of gender roles and yilunta in the political and economic environment of Ethiopia. * Rivista di Antropologia Post-Globale Heinonen original use of yilunta (shame, honor and family pride) that she relates to male hegemony in the wider Ethiopian cultural context enables her to bring forth a unifying theme that connects street children with larger cultural values and how they experience it. Her work is indispensable to the study of street children and to childhood studies. * Lewis Aptekar, San Jose State University Richly illustrated by quotes and life histories, this is an excellent ethnography of the ways in which young people develop resilience through continual reworking of webs of care, nurturance and interaction amongst themselves and with their families... The text is well written, comprehensive and based on a rich source of empirical material that is well analyzed and interpreted. * Tatek Abebe, Norwegian Centre for Child Research, Norwegian University of Sciences and Technology, Trondheim The book is a unique study based on long -term detailed field research. The author adopts the novel approach of analyzing gender and masculinity from the perspective of children and their families and how they experience it, and in the process offers a searing and unsparing gaze on the plight of families and children living in difficult circumstances. Dr. Heinonen's findings have profound implications, not just for policy makers and NGOs but for our very conception of 'street children' and 'youth gangs'. It is a major contribution to African ethnography and gender studies. * Marieme S. Lo, PhD, University of Toronto


Author Information

Paula Heinonen (nee Sinicco) is of Ethiopian/Italian parentage and grew up in Addis Ababa. She is College Lecturer in Gender Studies and the Anthropology of Development at Hertford, University of Oxford. Previously, she was Tutor and Visiting Fellows Program Coordinator at the International Gender Studies Centre, University of Oxford and Senior Lecturer in Anthropology and Head of Research at the University of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

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