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Relational Viewpoint and Agency in Emerging Adulthood

Relational Viewpoint and Agency in Emerging Adulthood. Tarja Juvonen Doctoral Student Department of Social Sciences, Social Work University of Helsinki. I`m researching. the stories of young people and outreach workers

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Relational Viewpoint and Agency in Emerging Adulthood

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  1. Relational Viewpoint and Agency in Emerging Adulthood Tarja Juvonen DoctoralStudent Department of Social Sciences, Social Work University of Helsinki

  2. I`m researching • the stories of young people and outreach workers • the meanings that are constructed in the encounters between young people and the workers in places like Adult Social Services, Unemployment Office and Housing Office • how, in these stories and interaction, one constructs young people´s agency and possibilities to act (toimijuus ja toimintamahdollisuudet).

  3. The ResearchField • Is placed on outreachworkdoneby a project in the Helsinki Metropolitan Area. • The project is aimed at youngpeopleaged 17 to 29 • Theseyoungpeoplearetypically in the middle of differenttransitionsbetweenyouth and adulthood • Outreachworktries to encounteryoungpeoplewhoseem to havevarious and difficultproblems in theirlives and whoarenotgettingthose social orhealthservicestheyshouldhaveorneed. • Main principles of outreachworkareyoungpeople`sright to decide on mattersconcerningtheirownlives, respect and trust on youngpeople

  4. The Research Design • A qualitative case study that is methodologically based on social constructionism and on a relational viewpoint, which emphasizes the significance of diverse social relationships and networks. • The data is collected by interviewing young people (11 intervieviews), by recording young people`s and outreach worker`s discussions (11 discussions ) and young people running errands in different officials (10 incidents) • As a part of data I have moderated and recorded two focus groups with Vamos workers.

  5. The ResearchMethod • Discourse analysis combined with Voice-centered relational method by Lyn Brown and Carol Gilligan, later developed by Natasha Mauthner and Andrea Doucet (1998) • Standpoints through which the data is read: • Reading for the plot and for researcher’s responses to the narrative. • Reading for the voice of the “I”. • Reading for relationships. • Placing people within cultural contexts and social structures

  6. Five main features for emerging adulthood (J.J. Arnett, 2004) • It is the age of identity explorations, of trying out various possibilities, especially in love and work. It is the age of instability. • It is the most self-focused age of life. • It is the age of feeling in-between, in transition, neither adolescent nor adult. • It is the age of possibilities, when hopes flourish, when people have an unparalleled opportunity to transform their lives.

  7. This book builds on two current developments in psychology scholarship and practice. The first centers on broad discontent with the individualist tradition in which the rational agent, or autonomous self, is considered the fundamental atom of social life. The second, and related development from which this work builds, is the search for alternatives to individualist understanding. • The present volume will give voice to the critique of individualism, but its major thrust is to develop and illustrate a far more radical and potentially exciting landscape of relational thought and practice that now exists. Most existing attempts to build a relational foundation remain committed to a residual form of individualist psychology. The present work carves out a space of understanding in which relational process stands prior to the very concept of the individual. More broadly, the book attempts to develop a thoroughgoing relational account of human activity. In doing so, Gergen reconstitutes 'the mind' as a manifestation of relationships. • Relational Being Beyond Self and Community • Kenneth J. Gergen

  8. RelationalViewpoint • where the world is understood depending on how we enter to the relationship with the world. (Karvonen 1997) • Relational agency is dynamic, systemic and constructed through varied relationships (Poikela 2010) • A relational ontology posits the notion of a relational being, that is a view of human beings as embedded in a complex web of intimate and larger social relations; in such an understanding of human nature and human interaction, people are viewed as interdependent rather than independent. (Mauthner & Doucet, 1998; Gergen, 2009 Relational Being). • Relational Viewpoint highlights the idea of knowledge that is based on human interaction and on dialog and is sustained by social processes. (Karvonen 1997) • Acceptance of relationality by the expert signifies his/her willingness to be influenced by, and learn from his/her interlocutors. (Folgheraiter 2004)

  9. Agency(Emirbayer & Mische 1998). can be conceptualized as ” a temporally embedded process of social engagement, informed by the past but also oriented to the future and toward the present. Agency is seen to actualize in certain contexts and relations. It is always agency toward something, by means of which actors enter into relationship with surrounding persons, places, meanings, and events.”

  10. Agency (Jeffery 2011, Layder 2006) • Agency implies the ability of individuals or groups to act on their situations, to behave as subjects rather than objects in their own lives, to shape their own circumstances and ultimately achieve change. • In exercising agency, individuals have the potential to influence the events around them and ultimately, in doing so, change the structure of society, which they may perceive as constraining and inhibiting towards them as individuals. • its (agency) significance as a concept lies in its relationship qualities. It is through communicative interaction with others, through our general sociability as human beings and our relationship with society and its constituent structures that agency needs to be viewed.

  11. Ideas? • How could I use the concept reciprocity in my research?

  12. Bibliography • Arnett, Jeffrey Jensen (2004) Emerging Adulthood. The Winding Road from the Late Teens through the Twenties. Oxford: Oxford University Press. • Brown, Lyn Mikel & Gilligan, Carol (1993) Meeting at the Crossroads: Women´s Psychology and Girl`s Development. Feminism & Psychology 3 (1), 11-35. • Emirbayer, Mustafa & Mische, Ann (1998) What is Agency? American Journal of Sociology, Volume 103, Number 4, 962-1023. • Jeffery, Liz (2011) Understanding Agency. Social welfare and change. Bristol: Polity Press. • Jokinen, Arja & Huttunen, Laura & Kulmala, Anna (2004) (toim.) Puhua vastaan ja vaieta • Mauthner, Natasha S. (2002) The Darkest Days of My Life: Stories of Postpartum Depression. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. • Mauthner, Natasha & Doucet, Andrea (1998): Reflections on a Voice-centred Relational Model. Analysing Matrenal and Domestic Voices. In Ribbens, Jane & Edwards, Rosalind (eds.):Feminist Dilemmas in Qualitative Research. London: Sage Publications, 119 - 146. • Mauthner, Natasha S. & Doucet, Andrea (2003) Reflexive Accounts and Accounts of Reflexivity in Qualitative Data Analysis.Sociology 2003 37: 413–431.

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