Uppeldi og menntun - 01.07.2015, Qupperneq 31

Uppeldi og menntun - 01.07.2015, Qupperneq 31
UPPELDI OG MENNTUN/ICELANDIC JOURNAL OF EDUCATION 24(2) 2015 31 GESTUR GUÐMUNDSSON Transition to adulthood: International research traditions and their message to Icelandic educational research ABSTRACT The article contains a historical overview of central traditions in the study of the transition of youth to adulthood. These studies are part of the broader research field of youth studies, often seen as one of two main strands of these studies, the other being the strand of youth culture. The article provides the argument that there should not be a rigid separation between these two strands. In some periods, especially the 1960s and 1970s, the limelight of researchers and readers was rather on youth culture studies – cultures of deviance, subcultures, cultures of resistance, and broader “com- mon cultures” of youth. Studies of youth transitions were less spectacular and often limited to entrance into the labour market. However, the great transformation of such transitions that achieved particular strength in the 1980s, shifted transition studies to the centre of youth studies. At the same time more sophisticated theories of transition were developed, not least based on Ulrich Beck’s theories of risk society, reflexivity and individualisation, and informed by gender studies and studies of ethnic and other minorities. An integral part of the 1990s agendas of transition studies was based on qualitative approaches and drew upon existing traditions of the study of biographies, life courses, and life histories. Main inspirations were found in the USA (with roots in Chicago), a German tradition of studying biographical narratives and French studies of generational continuity and change in life histories. Britain has been the country which most generously funded transition studies, especially at the turn of the century. Various approaches have been used, and the British research results have become a main reference for studies in other countries. However, it has become clear that the British history is somewhat exceptional, not least the swift vanishing of the youth labour market in Britain in the 1980s, and research- ers have paid growing attention to the varying patterns of transition found, even in the countries of the European Union. A handful of European projects have studied these divergent patterns and even launched a theoretical model of different transition regimes, drawing upon Esping-Andersen’s model of welfare regimes. Here the uni- versalistic regimes of the Nordic countries contrast the liberal regime of the United Kingdom, the subprotective (family and church-based) model of southern Europe and the employment centred regimes of German-speaking countries. However, a closer scrutiny reveals that all European countries mix elements of the different regimes and perhaps this regime model should be seen as an ideal type model. A central discussion of the transition analyses and debates has been the question of choices. Beck related his theories to German biographical research and pointed out that new generations increasingly tell their life stories as a series of choices, while the narratives of older generations rather referred to reigning norms at various stages of their lives. Some scholars have criticised the Beck-based approach for neoliberal
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