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Book cover for Revisiting Childhood Resilience Through Marginalised and Displaced Voices open access

Publication date: 11 February 2025

DOI: https://doi.org/10.14324/111.9781800087750

Number of illustrations: 7

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Revisiting Childhood Resilience Through Marginalised and Displaced Voices

Perspectives from the past and present

Wendy Sims-Schouten (Author)

Despite many decades of research into childhood resilience, it remains a contentious area with much still left to be resolved. Key terms are poorly defined, positioning marginalised and displaced children as objects rather than co-producers of knowledge. Research and practice frame resilience through individualised models of health and abnormality. These models emphasise individual responsibility over systemic oppression, ignoring personal marginalised voices and experiences, and the contribution of appropriate needs-based assistance. Resilience needs rethinking.

Revisiting Childhood Resilience Through Marginalised and Displaced Voices uses an interdisciplinary approach to challenge current childhood resilience research and practice. The culmination of ten years of research and publications around childhood resilience, the book draws upon data collected from and co-produced with children, young people and adults from marginalised, disadvantaged and displaced communities. In so doing, it highlights the transformative potential of stories told by marginalised and displaced children, past and present. When these narratives are prioritised, they disrupt, counter and draw critical attention to coping strategies in light of adversity and oppression, to inform creative research and policymaking. Centralising the voices of care leavers, young people who are bullied, members from minority ethnic communities and former migrants/refugees, among others, Wendy Sims-Schouten shines a light on 150 years of marginalised voices and experiences in relation to resilience.

Praise for Revisiting Childhood Resilience Through Marginalised and Displaced Voices

‘This thought-provoking book revisits the concept of resilience through close interpretation of the moving stories told by marginalised children and adults across time, shining new light on the rebellious, resistant ones, so often dismissed as ‘dangerous’ or ‘deviant’. A must-read!’
Helen Cowie, University of Surrey

‘Listening to the stories of marginalised people empowers their voices and gives a very rich, multifaceted and critically innovative perspective which can reshape how we understand oppression and exclusion. Especially, this liberating book shows how conventional discussions of individual resilience can obscure the social and cultural processes we need to understand.’
Helen Haste, University of Bath

‘Adopting an intriguing and eclectic perspective of resilience in understudied samples, this is a rare book that challenges the status quo. A must read for anyone seeking to gain unique insight into the concept of resilience.’
Nora Wiium, University of Bergen

List of figures and boxes
Acknowledgements

1 Introduction: counter-voices of resilience
2 Waifs, strays and care-experienced young people: compliance, defiance and morality
3 Eclectic resilience: child migration through children’s eyes
4 Bullying and resilience within a neoliberal framework
5 Resilience in light of discrimination, stigmas and othering
6 Resisting internalised failure and deficiency: (specific) learning difficulties and differences in children and young people
7 Intergenerational/transgenerational trauma, lived experiences and resilience
8 Eclectic resilience: tell me your story!

References
Index

DOI: 10.14324/111.9781800087750

Number of illustrations: 7

Publication date: 11 February 2025

PDF ISBN: 9781800087750

EPUB ISBN: 9781800087767

Read Online ISBN: 9781800087750

Hardback ISBN: 9781800087736

Paperback ISBN: 9781800087743

Wendy Sims-Schouten (Author)

Wendy Sims-Schouten is Head of the Arts and Sciences Department at UCL, Professor in Interdisciplinary Psychology and Chartered Member of the British Psychological Society. Her interdisciplinary research focuses on historic and contemporary practices and narratives around wellbeing and resilience of marginalised groups, including child migrants, young care leavers and families from ethnic minority communities. Her work centralises voices and coproduction. Wendy is Chair of the Editorial Board for the international and interdisciplinary journal Children and Society.

‘This thought-provoking book revisits the concept of resilience through close interpretation of the moving stories told by marginalised children and adults across time, shining new light on the rebellious, resistant ones, so often dismissed as ‘dangerous’ or ‘deviant’. A must-read!’
Helen Cowie, University of Surrey

‘Listening to the stories of marginalised people empowers their voices and gives a very rich, multifaceted and critically innovative perspective which can reshape how we understand oppression and exclusion. Especially, this liberating book shows how conventional discussions of individual resilience can obscure the social and cultural processes we need to understand.’
Helen Haste, University of Bath

‘Adopting an intriguing and eclectic perspective of resilience in understudied samples, this is a rare book that challenges the status quo. A must read for anyone seeking to gain unique insight into the concept of resilience.’
Nora Wiium, University of Bergen

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