34 research outputs found
Childrenâs discourses of natural spaces: considerations for childrenâs subjective well-being
Based on the evidence provided in the literature, it is manifest that increased time spent in nature increases various aspects of childrenâs well-being. Using discourse analysis on focus group interviews with 28 children between the ages of 12 and 14 years old from three socio-economically diverse communities in the Western Cape of South Africa, the study aimed to explore how children construct and assign meaning to natural spaces. More specifically the study explored how children use specific discursive resources and repertoires to construct and assign meaning to their engagement with natural spaces, and the extent to which this influences their subjective well-being. Several pertinent discourses emerged from the participantsâ accounts within four themes of: Safety and natural spaces, Appreciation for natural spaces, Degradation of Nature: Thinking environmentally, acting pro-environmentally, and Natural spaces and childrenâs subjective well-being. The study highlights the critical role that childrenâs engagement in natural spaces has on their subjective well-being, and how these benefits can be harnessed to better childrenâs overall quality of life.IS
Association of child maltreatment with South African adultsâ wages:Evidence from the Cape area panel study
Child maltreatment is a prevalent public health problem in both developed and developing countries. While many studies have investigated the relationship between violence against children and health of the victims, little is known about the long term economic consequences of child maltreatment, especially in developing countries. Using data from the Cape Area Panel Study, this paper applies Heckman selection models to investigate the relationship between childhood maltreatment and young adultsâ wages in South Africa. The results show that, on average, any experience of physical or emotional abuse during childhood is associated with a later 12% loss of young adultsâ wages. In addition, the correlation between physical abuse and economic consequence (14%) is more significant than the relationship between emotional abuse and wages (8%) of young adults; and the higher the frequency of maltreatment, the greater the associations with wages. With respect to gender differences, wage loss due to the experience of childhood maltreatment is larger for females than males. Specifically, malesâ wages are more sensitive to childhood emotional abuse, while femalesâ wages are more likely to be affected by childhood physical abuse. These results emphasize the importance of prioritizing investments in prevention and intervention programs to reduce the prevalence of child maltreatment and to help victims better overcome the long-term negative effect
My music, my voice: Musicality, culture and childhood in Vhavenda communities
The notion of childrenâs âvoicesâ is a construct used to frame the lack of power and agency that
young people yield in their lives. However, representing children as âvoicelessâ overlooks how
they employ tools, such as music, to voice their agency in dynamic, articulate, and meaningful ways.
This collaborative article examines how children and young people in Vhavenda communities in
South Africa utilize music to straddle their realities between tradition and change. Through this
exploration, we will demonstrate how children and young people shape, embody, and challenge
the lived and contemporary notions of what it means to be Vhavenda.http://chd.sagepub.comhb2016Musi