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The non-formal arts learning sector, youth provision, and paradox in the learning city

Faculty Advisor

Date

2019

Keywords

non-formal arts learning sector, learning city, youth culture, infrastructure, socio-technical assemblage, creative industries

Abstract (summary)

The 'learning city' contains a range of non-formal learning economies. In recent years researchers have focused on, what has been termed, the non-formal arts learning sector, to document best practices, the emergence of new literacies and/or cultural practices, and to highlight interventions that support otherwise marginalised and underserved communities. Yet, for all of this attention, the non-formal learning sector has remained an opaque object, defined by hazy boundaries, diverse programme structures, and a presence in cities that is difficult to grasp. In this paper we develop an account of the non-formal arts learning sector for socially disadvantaged youth by treating it as a 'socio-technical assemblage' of the learning city. We draw on data from the Youthsites research project and examine the history, priorities, and tensions in the sector between 1995 and 2015, a period when the youth arts sector has become a significant feature of urban space. We trace the emergence of the sector in three global cities, analyse a series of paradoxes linked to income and property, the labelling of youth, and organisation aims, and show how these paradoxes shape the sector's broader relationship with the state, labour and consumer markets, and related institutions that allocate support for young people.

Publication Information

Stuart R. Poyntz, Rebecca Coles, Heather Fitzsimmons-Frey, Alysha Bains, Julian Sefton-Green & Michael Hoechsmann (2019) The non-formal arts learning sector, youth provision, and paradox in the learning city, Oxford Review of Education, 45:2, 258-278, DOI: 10.1080/03054985.2018.1551196

Notes

Item Type

Article

Language

English

Rights

All Rights Reserved