Who's Got the Power? : Young Children's Power and Agency in the Child-Parent Relationship
Sevón, E. (2015). Who's Got the Power? : Young Children's Power and Agency in the Child-Parent Relationship. International Journal of Child, Youth and Family Studies, 6(4-1), 622-645. https://doi.org/10.18357/ijcyfs.641201515049
Authors
Date
2015Copyright
© 2015 the Author & School of Child and Youth Care, University of Victoria. This is an open access article published under the Creative Commons License.
Children’s rights and their increasing voice in families have made relations between parents and children more democratic. Despite this, child-parent relationships have been claimed to be relationships between unequals from the perspective of power. Often, power is understood as top-down with parents as wielders of power over their children and children as recipients of parental demands. The generational ordering of relations between children and adults poses the challenge of how to conceptualize power in the child-parent relationship, and how methodologically to study power and children’s agency, in particular, from the viewpoint of young children. This study explored in what ways power and young children’s agency become visible in power struggles and negotiations in the child-parent relationship. The participants were 18 Finnish 4- to 7-year-old children. The data consisted of episodes of challenging situations in the child-parent relationship collected via a multi-method approach. In these episodes, power was related to parental authority and child compliance, but also to the child’s possibilities for agency via many forms of resistance and accommodation. Young children’s agency can be seen as connected to the opportunity to resist, to participate in the negotiation of power, and so to influence and evoke change in the child-parent relationship.
...
Publisher
School of Child and Youth CareISSN Search the Publication Forum
1920-7298Keywords
Original source
http://journals.uvic.ca/index.php/ijcyfs/article/view/15049Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/25349540
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as © 2015 the Author & School of Child and Youth Care, University of Victoria. This is an open access article published under the Creative Commons License.
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Sociodemographic Correlates of Parental Co-Participation in Digital Media Use and Physical Play of Preschool-Age Children
Hasanen, Elina; Koivukoski, Henriikka; Kortelainen, Lauri; Vehmas, Hanna; Sääkslahti, Arja (MDPI AG, 2021)Young children’s digital media use and physical activity have gained attention in recent research. Parental co-participation has a major impact on children’s health consequences. This study addressed a gap in the research ... -
Predicting pool safety habits and intentions of Australian parents and carers for their young children
Hamilton, Kyra; Peden, Amy E.; Smith, Stephanie; Hagger, Martin S. (Elsevier Ltd, 2019)Introduction Children under five years are most at risk of experiencing fatal and nonfatal drowning. The highest proportion of drowning incidents occur in private swimming pools. Lapses in adult supervision and failures ... -
Early prediction of reading : phonological awareness and related language and cognitive skills in children with a familial risk for dyslexia
Puolakanaho, Anne (University of Jyväskylä, 2007)PsL Anne Puolakanaho selvitti väitöstutkimuksessaan, miten leikki-ikäisten 3 - 5-vuotiaiden lasten kielelliset ja kognitiiviset taidot ovat yhteydessä lukemisen virheettömyyteen ja sujuvuuteen kouluiässä. Puolakanaho tutki ... -
How Do Children Describe Learning Self-Regulation Skills in the Kids’ Skills Intervention?
Hautakangas, Merja; Uusitalo, Lotta; Kumpulainen, Kristiina (Springer, 2022)In this chapter, 26 Finnish children between 4 and 4 years old described how they learned self-regulation skills after participating in the Kids’ Skills programme in an early childhood education (ECE) setting. Kids’ Skills ... -
What factors relate to three profiles of perception of motor competence in young children?
Niemistö, Donna; Barnett, Lisa M.; Cantell, Marja; Finni, Taija; Korhonen, Elisa; Sääkslahti, Arja (Routledge, 2022)The study aims were to 1) examine profiles of perception of motor competence (PMC) in relation to actual motor competence (AMC), i.e. under-estimators (UEs), realistic estimators (REs) and over-estimators (OEs) and 2) ...