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Session Submission Type: Paper Session (90 minute)
How do children experience and navigate violence perpetrated by the state? When do systems of child protection and child welfare succeed, and when do they fail or become complicit? This session brings together scholars to address the critical challenges facing children at the fault lines of state power. We seek contributions that explore the realities of childhood amidst war, migration, and carceral systems, among other topics. Both theoretical and empirical approaches are welcome.
School-Based Corporal Punishment: A Form of State Violence - Meaghan Mingo, University of Notre Dame
Environmental Displacement and the Restructuring of Childhood: An Environmental Justice Analysis of Charland Children in Bangladesh - Shammy Islam; A B M Nurullah, Virginia Tech
“You are a Parasite – the Scum of the Earth”: Children’s Resistance to Necropolitics in Urban India - Ragini Saira Malhotra, University of Southern Maine
Tracing the Emotional Echoes of Police Contact in Everyday Life - Jasmyne Nelson, University of Texas-Austin; Jacob E. Cheadle, University of Texas at Austin
From the Margins to Center: Reimagining the Child Welfare System from the Perspective of Youth - Joanne Golann, Vanderbilt University; Randi Mandelbaum; Hannah Kim; Gabriella Ulloa Para; Kevin Pasquette