1st Edition

Routledge Handbook of Childhood Studies and Global Development

Edited By Tatek Abebe, Anandini Dar, Karen Wells Copyright 2025
632 Pages 24 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

632 Pages 24 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

632 Pages 24 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This Routledge Handbook of Childhood Studies and Global Development explores how global development agendas and economic development influence children’s lives. It demonstrates that children are not only the frequent targets or objects of development but that they also shape and influence processes of development and social change in diverse and meaningful ways. The handbook makes the case... Read more

Childhood Studies and Global Development - Introduction

Tatek Abebe, Anandini Dar and Karen Wells

 

Section 1: Researching Childhood and Development

1.  Section Introduction by Anandini Dar

 

2.  The Dispersed Child: Indian Children and their Archival Presence in Missionary Collections

Hia Sen

 

3.  Development Research with Children from A Decolonial Perspective: Experimentation with Knowledge and Learning to Think Otherwise   

Lucia Rabello de Castro

 

4.  Participatory Knowledge Co-Generation with Children: Ethics and Politics of Engagement

Tatek Abebe and Hilde Refstie

 

5.  Ethics and Consent in Research with Children and Young People in Global Development

Julia Truscott, Antonia Canosa and Anne Graham

 

6.  Visual Research

Karen Wells

 

7.  Using a Mixed Methods Approach to Identify Pathways to Adolescent Girl Empowerment

Mallika Tharakan, R.Maithreyi, Manideep Govindu

 

Section 2: Political activism and development

8.  Section Introduction by Karen Wells

 

9.  Political Socialization in Militarized State: Youth in Armed Conflict of Indian Administered Kashmir

Khalid Wasim Hassan

 

10.  New Readings for Palestinian Children and Youth’s Experiences During the British Mandate: the Birth of Children’s Political Agency

Janette Habashi

 

11.  “Capitalism Doesn’t Empower Me”: Latin American Children’s Activism and Critiques of Neoliberal Development

Jessica K. Taft

12.  Children as Environmental Actors: a Generational Perspective on Climate Activism in an Overheated World

Tanu Biswas and Thomas Hylland Eriksen

 

13.  Colombian Child-Soldiers and Their Status as Political Actors

Diana Carolina García Gómez

 

Section 3: Migration, Children, and Development

14.  Section Introduction by Anandini Dar

 

15.  Exclusionary Locales of Migration and Education in India: Situating Heterogeneous Manifestations of NGO Schooling

Vijitha Rajan

 

16.  Children’s health and well-being in the context of parental migration: the case of Southeast Asia

Yao Fu, Lucy Jordan, Thida Kim and Elspeth Graham

 

17.  The Politics of Unaccompanied Child Migration at the U.S./Mexico Border

Kate Swanson

 

18.  Transnational Migration and Childhood, Social Reproduction and Economic Crisis

Michael Boampong

 

 

Section 4: Health, Gender Norms, and Development

19.  Section Introduction by Karen Wells

 

20.  Sexual Violence Against Children

Janelle Rabe

 

21.  Navigating Social and Gender Norms in Early Childhood - a Case Study in a Flood-Prone Area in Amazonian Peru

Karina Padilla, Deborah Fry and María Cecilia Dedios

 

22.  Influence of Policies on Early Adolescent's Sexual and Reproductive Health

Liseth Lourdes Arias López

 

23.  Sexuality, Bodies and Desire through the Schooling of Girls

Deevia Bhana

 

24.  Children and Adolescents Living with and Affected by HIV in African Countries: Converging Crises, Vulnerability, and Resilience

Courtney Myers, Edith Apondi, and Leslie A. Enane

 

Section 5: Governing Childhoods: Law and Rights

25.  Section Introduction by Tatek Abebe

 

26.  Child Rights Governance in International Development 

Anna Holzscheiter, Felix Stadelmann & Benjamin Stachursky

 

27.  The Politics of Child Rights: Protecting the “World-Child”, Governing the Future 

Jana Tabak 

 

28.  The Global Politics of Child Labour: A Critical Analysis

Laurence LeBlanc & Edward van Daalen

 

29.  Disability and Education Under Conflict and Crisis in the Global South

Dina Kiwan 

 

30.  Explaining Variation in Compliance with Anti-FGM and Child Marriage Law in Burkina Faso

Josephine Wouango & Susan L. Ostermann

 

31.  A Critical Reflection on Ghana’s Childhood, Child Rights and Child Labour Governance Modalities: A Case Study of Abolitionist Discourses and Practices on Children’s Work in the Fishing Sector

Sam Okyere, Nana K Agyeman & Bernard Koomson

 

Section 6: Childhood and Social Reproduction

32.  Section Introduction by Tatek Abebe

 

33.  Gendered Navigations of Space, Work and Education in Young Adivasi Lives in India

Gunjan Wadhwa

 

34.  ‘Skilling’ Educated Youth for Insecure Employment in the Informal Economy 

Sarada Balagopalan and Ketaki Prabha

 

35.  Mothers’ Reflections on Generational Changes in Childhood in a Mayan Town: Globalisation Challenges to Convivencia/Togetherness 

Itzel Aceves-Azuara, Barbara Rogoff, & Marta Navichoc Cotuc

 

36.  Children as Agents of Change to Reach the Water Security Sustainable Development Goal in the Climate Crisis 

Martina Angela Caretta and Bronwyn Hayward

 

37.  Early Childhood Education in Turkana Pastoralist Communities of Kenya

John Ng’asike

 

38.  From Post-Development to Post-Schooling: Rethinking Educational Pathways with Agro-pastoralists in Southwest Ethiopia

Sabrina Maurus

 

Section 7: Culture, Childhood and Development

39.  Section Introduction by Karen Wells

 

40.  Language Policy, Development and Translanguaging in Africa

Karen Wells and Girma Muluneh

 

41.  Children’s Play Cultures in West Africa

Peace Mamle Tetteh

 

42.  The Role of Videogames in The Socio-Cultural Life of Children in Peru

Jerjes Loayza

 

43.  Sport for Development

Itamar Dubinsky

 

44.  Resisting State-Sponsored Oppression through Applied Theatre: A Brazilian case study

Marina Henriques Coutinho with Tim Prentki

 

Biography

Tatek Abebe is a Professor of Childhood Studies at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, where he teaches postgraduate courses on cultural epistemologies of childhood, development, global south childhoods and youth, participatory methodologies and ethics. His ethnographic research examines how young people are affected by and shape the political-economic environment they inhabit, with an emphasis on their activism, inter-generational relationships, care, livelihoods, labouring and learning.

Anandini Dar is Associate Professor at the School of Liberal Studies, BML Munjal University (BMU). She is the co-founder and co-convener of the Critical Childhoods and Youth Studies Collective (CCYSC), and serves as the advisory board member of The Childism Institute, at the Rutgers University, USA. She also serves on the international editorial board of the journal Children’s Geographies, Taylor & Francis, and is the Series Editor of Studies in Childhood and Youth for Palgrave Macmillan. Dr. Dar’s areas of research intersect childhood studies, development studies, sociology, education, and feminist studies. She has published on the topics of children’s rights, politics, migration, de-colonialism, and youth.

Karen Wells is a Professor of International Development and Childhood Studies at Birkbeck, University of London. She has over twenty years of experience in research on the intersection between international political economy and socio-cultural fields in the formation of childhood. She has published widely on this research.

In this powerfully argued handbook, Abebe, Dar and Wells show how we can make major changes in development by shining the spotlight on childhood studies and recognising the agency of children and their role in creating and shaping the future we want. The handbook confronts contemporary complexity, systems, power, and mechanisms, including established institutions, that perpetuate children as victims of exploitation or recipients of top-down development interventions. Based on the critical theoretical insights grounded with rich empirical evidence that provides a compelling call for reflection and action, this handbook is a wonderful gift to all development professionals, practitioners, activists, government and concerned citizens who want to make our world a better place. We are all in this together!

Ebenezer Forkuo Amankwaa, Senior Lecturer of Human Geography, Department of Geography and Resource Development, University of Ghana, Ghana

 

This impressive handbook comprises a collection of chapters that vividly illustrates the breadth and depth of research in the intersecting fields of childhood studies and global development. The seven well thought thorough sections introduce some genuinely novel approaches that, as the editors point out, move beyond the established focus on ‘the agentic child’ and ‘the authentic child voice’. Writing from diverse geographical locations, the authors explore childhoods through a decolonial lens, present archival and historical studies, encounter arts and sport and take young people’s politics and activism seriously.

Nicola Ansell, Professor of Human Geography, Director of the MA program on Children, Youth and International Development, Brunel University, UK

 

The Handbook of Childhood Studies and Global Development is an invaluable resource for researchers, teachers and students, policymakers and practitioners seeking fresh insights and approaches to understanding relationships between global development processes and the lived experiences of children. Comprising 45 chapters, organized across seven well-conceptualized thematic sections, this volume comprehensively engages with current debates, concepts, theories and research findings on childhood and children around the world, and excellently integrates perspectives from diverse regions and scholarly disciplines. Addressing pressing global challenges, including migration, public health, ecological threats, economic inequality, human rights protections, and uncertain futures, this volume ushers in new ways for researchers, students, and practitioners to appreciate how global development processes influence children’s lives as well as how children shape development. I hope its chapters will be added to many scholars’ and practitioners’ reading lists.

Elizabeth Cooper, Associate Professor, School for International Studies, Simon Fraser University; Canada, Author of Burning Ambition: Education, Arson, and Learning Justice in Kenya

 

This all-important book intersects development, regardless of the ideological or normative connotation, with childhood and children as a biosocial category. By reframing pertinent issues on child research, health, migration, child rights, and culture, this insightful book by social scientists and development practitioners has succeeded in stimulating further integration of children and childhood into discourses of development.

Yaw Ofosu-Kusi, Professor, School of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Energy and Natural Resources, Sunyani, Ghana

 

Providing a comprehensive, innovative, and groundbreaking view, this book responds to the problem of how to place children in developmental studies, overcoming, as its editors indicate, the parallel trends that construct children as victims of exploitation or privileged recipients of development improvements. The chapters analyze the contexts, social relationships, temporalities and complex spatialities of development, rather than solely addressing “child agency” or “the child's voice.” This shift, which is also accompanied by a change in preferred methodological strategies, allows for an innovative and necessary advancement in the generationalization of development studies. The handbook addresses urgent contemporary topics and at the same time allows for progress both in the contributions that childhood studies can make to development studies, and in the deployment of new questions and approaches, in order to understand childhood in the framework of contemporary social transformations. Tackling the urgent problems that affect the lives of millions of children, this book is a key tool for navigating the future of childhood studies and development studies and policies.

Valeria Llobet, Professor, Director of the Center for the Studies of Inequalities, Subjects and Institutions (CEDESI), Universidad de San Martín, Researcher, Laboratory of Human Sciences (LICH), CONICET, Argentina

 

This new handbook is very welcome because it is centred around not only critiquing dominant development discourses, but also illuminating the value that childhood studies scholarship can bring to bear on key issues that are often centred in development discourses such as education (both in relation to early childhood and young adults), health (including sexual and reproductive health), children’s rights, and migration. The handbook brings together a diverse range of childhood studies scholars, including those at different stages in their career and based in institutions in both the North and the South, who all, in their respective ways, offer compelling and persuasive arguments that are long overdue in dominant development discourses. Beyond touching on key development issues, the handbook further covers a vast number of pertinent topics, including methodologies in researching children’s lives in developing contexts, children’s political activism and childhood and social reproduction – to name but a few - across a breath-taking range of Southern contexts – primarily located in Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, South Asia and South East Asia. As a childhood studies scholar who moved into the field from a development studies background that had left me feeling out of place, uncomfortable and dissatisfied, I am very excited about this book and its potential to contribute to existing development studies thinking and teaching. Putting together this volume was clearly no mean feat. I commend the editors for their efforts in bringing forth these refreshing perspectives relating to children and development and I look forward to drawing on this volume in my own teaching.

Afua Twum-Danso Imoh, Associate Professor in Global Childhoods and Welfare, The University of Bristol, UK