Youth on the Move: Virtual Online Lecture Series

Location: Online (Zoom)
Language: English

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Youth on the Move

An interdisciplinary dialogue on Urban Africa and Asia from October 2023 – January 2024

‘Youth on the Move’ observes emerging socio-spatial practices of youth in African and Asian contexts, and examines their modes of moving and meaning-making through an embodied politics of performance. While youth indexes a range of people across spectrums of class, gender, caste, including from (im)migrants, labour, women, early career researchers or students; practices of movement are oriented towards livelihoods, home making, political action or trans-local migration or even artistic expression. How, why, and what are the multiple meanings of youth performing in Southern urban space; How do these different or shared practices of (im)mobility on the move inter-relate with or cross-refer each other? The project gathers urban scholars, architects, artists, curators and local youth groups from Asia and Africa for a collective contemplation through in-depth dialogues on unpeeling the multi-layered, mobile ‘Southern urbanity’.

The two-part virtual lecture series brings a range of urban and cultural practitioners to discuss and lay the theoretical base for the project. These are:

Lecture Series I: The Time and Space of Youth: Situating Youth in Southern Cities

This series of virtual lectures examines the multi-layered conceptions of youth in a southern context, and argues for alternative frameworks of understanding youth beyond terms like ‘boredom’ and ‘precarity’. We invite scholars of urban studies, anthropology, sociology and culture studies to share their research and reflect on how these approaches enrich the understanding of youth living in the South.

Lecture Series II: Life on the Move: (Im)mobility and Daily Practices of the Youth

This set of discussions approach the translocal movements of youth from the perspective of everyday life. We invite scholars whose research projects examine the life of ordinary people, for instance, street vendors, matatu (mini-bus) drivers, women, and translocal migrant workers to map the different trajectories of moving within and between the Southern cities.

Register with the Asia-Africa network for regular updates on the event.

More about the project can be found here: www.asiaafricayouth.com

All the sessions are free and open to public.

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"It is not an overstatement to say that the USF Fellowship was invaluable in relation to both my career development and the advancement of my research around urban politics. The USF Fellowship provided me with an opportunity to be part a diverse, open and stimulating academic milieu; to have the space and time to focus on research, and to pave the way for future academic research development."

Dr Lazaros Karaliotas, Postdoctoral Research Fellowship

Urban Studies Foundation is a registered Scottish charity. Registration number SC039937.

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