Children, Youth and Environments.
Vol 14, No.2 (2004)
ISSN 1546-2250

Globalization and Gendered Social Transformation: Young People’s Lives in an Urban Artisan Community in India

 

Ruchira Ganguly-Scrase
University of Wollongong
New South Wales, Australia


Citation: Ganguly-Scrase, Ruchira. (2004). “Globalization and Gendered Social Transformation: Young People’s Lives in an Urban Artisan Community in India.” Children, Youth and Environments 14(2): 45-66. Retrieved [date] from http://www.colorado.edu/journals/cye/

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Abstract

Scholarly accounts of children of the urban poor in South Asia often decry the exploitative conditions of child labor - the harsh and debilitating environmental conditions. At the same time, these accounts treat children merely as victims and consequently leave out the felt experiences of working class children and youth. Poverty and inequality entrenched at the spatial level in developing countries is a familiar sight. Yet, little is known about the ways in which young people in these environments perceive their dispossession and whom they hold accountable for their marginalization. Based on fieldwork among a marginalized leather worker community in an urban neighborhood in India, this paper aims to go beyond countering homogenizing perspectives and the challenge to the exploitation narratives. In doing so, I examine the specific responses of young people through ethnographic accounts of the ways in which they actively construct their own identities, and reinterpret and negotiate adult notions of labor, caste, and community solidarity. To gain a deeper understanding of the dynamics of the lifeworlds of young people I draw attention to the mutually reinforcing nature of the hierarchical social and spatial relations found in the neighborhood. In addition I analyze the nature of youth discontent towards their traditional occupation and also their discontent with the general declining employment prospects in a globalizing Indian economy. By exploring the conflicts within and between genders and generations emanating from the changing economic conditions I consider the future opportunities for young people in marginalized communities in the South.

Keywords: child labor, urban poor, generational conflict, class structure, socio-spatial structure, gender roles, youth employment, India.