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Children, Youth and Environments
Vol 13, No.1 (Spring 2003)
ISSN 1546-2250
Children under Fire: Challenging Assumptions
about Children’s Resilience
Jo
Boyden
Oxford University
Citation:
Boyden, Jo. “Children
under Fire: Challenging Assumptions about Children’s
Resilience.” Children, Youth and Environments
13(1), Spring 2003. Retrieved [date] from http://colorado.edu/journals/cye.
Abstract
This
article examines perceptions of childhood and child development
and theories of human responses to adversity that have arisen
within the social and medical sciences and highlights their influence
on policy and practice in the context of armed conflict. It highlights
how the idea of childhood as a decontextualized and universal
life phase characterized by dependence and vulnerability interacts
with and is reinforced by a view of war-survivors as traumatized
individuals, victims in need of remedial care. It argues for a
paradigmatic shift towards understanding childhood as a highly
diverse life phase shaped not simply by biological or psychological
universals but also, and more importantly, by personal and environmental
factors. This paradigmatic shift involves thinking about children
as agents of their own development who, even during times of great
adversity, consciously act upon and influence the environments
in which they live.
Keywords:
children’s resilience; children and war; paradigms of childhood
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