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BLACK, BRITISH YOUNG WOMEN ‘ON ROAD’: INTERSECTIONS OF GENDER, RACE, AND YOUTH IN BRITISH INTERWAR YOUTH PENAL REFORM

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Published

Standard

BLACK, BRITISH YOUNG WOMEN ‘ON ROAD’: INTERSECTIONS OF GENDER, RACE, AND YOUTH IN BRITISH INTERWAR YOUTH PENAL REFORM. / Miller, Esmorie.
Exploring Urban Youth Culture Outside of the Gang Paradigm: Critical Questions of Youth, Gender and Race On-road. ed. / Jade Levell; Tara Young; Rod Earle. Bristol: Policy Press, 2023.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Miller, E 2023, BLACK, BRITISH YOUNG WOMEN ‘ON ROAD’: INTERSECTIONS OF GENDER, RACE, AND YOUTH IN BRITISH INTERWAR YOUTH PENAL REFORM. in J Levell, T Young & R Earle (eds), Exploring Urban Youth Culture Outside of the Gang Paradigm: Critical Questions of Youth, Gender and Race On-road. Policy Press, Bristol. <https://bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/exploring-urban-youth-culture-outside-of-the-gang-paradigm>

APA

Miller, E. (2023). BLACK, BRITISH YOUNG WOMEN ‘ON ROAD’: INTERSECTIONS OF GENDER, RACE, AND YOUTH IN BRITISH INTERWAR YOUTH PENAL REFORM. In J. Levell, T. Young, & R. Earle (Eds.), Exploring Urban Youth Culture Outside of the Gang Paradigm: Critical Questions of Youth, Gender and Race On-road Policy Press. https://bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/exploring-urban-youth-culture-outside-of-the-gang-paradigm

Vancouver

Miller E. BLACK, BRITISH YOUNG WOMEN ‘ON ROAD’: INTERSECTIONS OF GENDER, RACE, AND YOUTH IN BRITISH INTERWAR YOUTH PENAL REFORM. In Levell J, Young T, Earle R, editors, Exploring Urban Youth Culture Outside of the Gang Paradigm: Critical Questions of Youth, Gender and Race On-road. Bristol: Policy Press. 2023

Author

Miller, Esmorie. / BLACK, BRITISH YOUNG WOMEN ‘ON ROAD’ : INTERSECTIONS OF GENDER, RACE, AND YOUTH IN BRITISH INTERWAR YOUTH PENAL REFORM. Exploring Urban Youth Culture Outside of the Gang Paradigm: Critical Questions of Youth, Gender and Race On-road. editor / Jade Levell ; Tara Young ; Rod Earle. Bristol : Policy Press, 2023.

Bibtex

@inbook{b44f4bdbb3e3401c82c24070382244e8,
title = "BLACK, BRITISH YOUNG WOMEN {\textquoteleft}ON ROAD{\textquoteright}: INTERSECTIONS OF GENDER, RACE, AND YOUTH IN BRITISH INTERWAR YOUTH PENAL REFORM",
abstract = "The analysis in this chapter draws on documentary research from the Liverpool University Archives, including the Fletcher Report (1930) and the digitized catalogue of the Eugenics Review, a populist journal spanning 1909 to 1968. While documents like the Report introduced racialized youth to Britain, as a problematic cohort, the pseudo-science promulgated in the Review supported the racial politics positioning these youth outside the redemptive scope of early penal reform efforts. Fletcher (1930: 26) concluded that {\textquoteleft}These families have a low standard of life, morally and economically, and there appears to be little future for the children.{\textquoteright} This conclusion stands counter to narratives supporting rehabilitation for White, working class youth, especially during the interwar period (Miller, 2022). In this chapter, the concept of being on {\textquoteleft}the road{\textquoteright} offers a unique lens to give gendered relevance to this history. For example, during this time, young women{\textquoteright}s search for opportunities met with resistance at both the societal and institutional levels. In this regard, Crenshaw{\textquoteright}s intersectional logic attends to the important intersections of race, gender, youth giving critical currency to the wider implications of this exclusion. In Historicising and gendering {\textquoteleft}on road{\textquoteright} in this way, the chapter emphasizes the importance of conceptual approaches expanding the explanatory scope about racialized youth{\textquoteright}s contemporary contested positioning, beyond the customary malignant to suturing to crime and punishment. ",
keywords = "Race, Gender, History, Road",
author = "Esmorie Miller",
year = "2023",
month = sep,
day = "21",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781529225570",
editor = "Jade Levell and Tara Young and Rod Earle",
booktitle = "Exploring Urban Youth Culture Outside of the Gang Paradigm",
publisher = "Policy Press",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - BLACK, BRITISH YOUNG WOMEN ‘ON ROAD’

T2 - INTERSECTIONS OF GENDER, RACE, AND YOUTH IN BRITISH INTERWAR YOUTH PENAL REFORM

AU - Miller, Esmorie

PY - 2023/9/21

Y1 - 2023/9/21

N2 - The analysis in this chapter draws on documentary research from the Liverpool University Archives, including the Fletcher Report (1930) and the digitized catalogue of the Eugenics Review, a populist journal spanning 1909 to 1968. While documents like the Report introduced racialized youth to Britain, as a problematic cohort, the pseudo-science promulgated in the Review supported the racial politics positioning these youth outside the redemptive scope of early penal reform efforts. Fletcher (1930: 26) concluded that ‘These families have a low standard of life, morally and economically, and there appears to be little future for the children.’ This conclusion stands counter to narratives supporting rehabilitation for White, working class youth, especially during the interwar period (Miller, 2022). In this chapter, the concept of being on ‘the road’ offers a unique lens to give gendered relevance to this history. For example, during this time, young women’s search for opportunities met with resistance at both the societal and institutional levels. In this regard, Crenshaw’s intersectional logic attends to the important intersections of race, gender, youth giving critical currency to the wider implications of this exclusion. In Historicising and gendering ‘on road’ in this way, the chapter emphasizes the importance of conceptual approaches expanding the explanatory scope about racialized youth’s contemporary contested positioning, beyond the customary malignant to suturing to crime and punishment.

AB - The analysis in this chapter draws on documentary research from the Liverpool University Archives, including the Fletcher Report (1930) and the digitized catalogue of the Eugenics Review, a populist journal spanning 1909 to 1968. While documents like the Report introduced racialized youth to Britain, as a problematic cohort, the pseudo-science promulgated in the Review supported the racial politics positioning these youth outside the redemptive scope of early penal reform efforts. Fletcher (1930: 26) concluded that ‘These families have a low standard of life, morally and economically, and there appears to be little future for the children.’ This conclusion stands counter to narratives supporting rehabilitation for White, working class youth, especially during the interwar period (Miller, 2022). In this chapter, the concept of being on ‘the road’ offers a unique lens to give gendered relevance to this history. For example, during this time, young women’s search for opportunities met with resistance at both the societal and institutional levels. In this regard, Crenshaw’s intersectional logic attends to the important intersections of race, gender, youth giving critical currency to the wider implications of this exclusion. In Historicising and gendering ‘on road’ in this way, the chapter emphasizes the importance of conceptual approaches expanding the explanatory scope about racialized youth’s contemporary contested positioning, beyond the customary malignant to suturing to crime and punishment.

KW - Race, Gender, History, Road

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9781529225570

BT - Exploring Urban Youth Culture Outside of the Gang Paradigm

A2 - Levell, Jade

A2 - Young, Tara

A2 - Earle, Rod

PB - Policy Press

CY - Bristol

ER -