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Health matters: the social impacts of street-involved youth’s participation in a structured leisure programme

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Pages 46-63 | Received 15 Feb 2013, Accepted 25 Nov 2014, Published online: 02 Jan 2015
 

Abstract

In this ethnographically informed study, we used a Foucauldian approach to examine the social impacts of street-involved youth’s participation in a structured leisure programme. Our findings suggest that structured leisure activities help to facilitate social ties between the youth participants as well as the youth and programme staff/volunteers. Nevertheless, we found that structured leisure does not necessarily assist in the formation of relationships between street-involved youth and members of the mainstream community outside of the programme. We show how the ways the youth took up dominant discourses concerning street-involved youth and engaged with technologies of the self-influenced their social relationships and their ties to the community. These findings complicate our understanding of structured leisure’s potential benefits for street-involved youth.

Notes

1. We use the term ‘homeless’ in place of ‘street-involved’ in cases where the authors of the literature upon which we draw used homeless as the noun to describe the population of individuals with/on whom they conducted their research.

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