Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) R. Raby , Mary-Beth Raddon
ANO Não informado
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Canadian Journal of Sociology
ISSN 0318-6431
E-ISSN 1710-1123
EDITORA University of Alberta Library
DOI 10.29173/cjs21758
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18

Resumo

The 2012 appearance on YouTube of a speech about banking reform prompted mainstream news coverage and hundreds of online comments, dwelling less on the content of the speech than on the speaker, Victoria Grant, a twelve year-old girl. A qualitative content analysis of over 600 comments revealed disagreement about children's capacities as participants in political and economic discussions. Commenters' mixed beliefs were linked to dominant, frequently contradictory, discourses of childhood. Victoria Grant was positioned as embedded in educational processes, as competent but often exceptional, as incompetent, and as innocent and therefore vulnerable. These conflicting yet emotionally charged narratives of childhood illustrate the concept's rhetorical elasticity and flexibility. Despite advances in the cause of children's social participation in recent years, most of these adult-centered narratives undermine the idea of children as legitimate contributors to economic analysis and political debate.

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