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Youth Development and Critical Education

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Profiles programs for economically disadvantaged, inner-city youth engaged in neighborhood revitalization and community organization programs.Public policy debates about urban crime and the fate of...
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  • 13 March 1997
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Profiles programs for economically disadvantaged, inner-city youth engaged in neighborhood revitalization and community organization programs.

Public policy debates about urban crime and the fate of America's crumbling inner cities suggest a need to consider solutions that create conditions for sustainable community development-where youths join with caring adults in intergenerational coalitions at the grassroots. Using a field-based approach, the author reviews over two dozen youth development projects in non-school and after-school settings. The analyses of these programs examines how young people might achieve a level of economic and political self-determination and community control, as well as personal fulfillment coupled with healthy adolescent growth. Once empowered with critical insights, young people can exhibit positive, real-life displays of their visions, dreams, and ambitions.

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Price: £25.00
Pages: 181
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series, Democracy and Education
Publication Date: 13 March 1997
ISBN: 9780791433508
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

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"Filled with first-hand examples of youth action in urban areas, this resource serves as an antidote to the 'there is nothing to be done' attitude so rampant these days." — George Wood, author of Schools That Work: America's Most Innovative Public Education Programs

"Richard D. Lakes brings us to a world beyond possibility—a world where theory is realized to its fullest potential through the lives of individuals and groups dedicated to improving their worlds. In the Freirian sense these individuals truly make the road by walking. I believe this type of project is the next direction for critical pedagogy—to move beyond the languages of critique and possibility into a fuller realization and concretization of theory at local sites." — Bryan Deever, Georgia Southern University

List of Illustrations

Preface

Introduction

1. Community Economics

2. Neighborhood Improvement

3. Health and Wellness

4. Street Arts

5. Youth Leadership

6. Beacons of Hope

Conclusion

Appendix A: Resource Directory

Notes

References

Index