Challenging structured participation opportunities

Year of production: 2014

Image is illustrative. Photo by Pavel Nekoranec on Unsplash

This paper claims that young people interact more widely with societies where formal structures for engagement are too narrow. To be able to respond to such limitations, it is important to resist simple dualism (collectivist/individualist citizen, representative/participatory democracy, representative/direct, institutional/ non-institutional participation, party politics/life politics, conventional/social movement-related citizenship behaviour, modern adults/post-modern young, and so on) and recognise the pluralism and richness of democratic culture.

Analysing the state of participation requires recognising different manifestations of democracy and democratic engagement in the daily life of young people.

You may also like

2012 Tools, Inspirational Practices

Toolkit on environmental law and youth participation

2009 Studies, Inspirational Practices

Student‐led campus climate change initiatives in Canada