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Urban Girls
ISSN: 2470-122X
With more attention being directed toward adolescent girls' and young women’s educational development and human rights across the globe, urban girls as an educationally and politically disenfranchised group are becoming more of the primary focus of educational, sociological, and psychological research and discourse. There is a need for theory, inquiry, and praxis that considers the dynamics of the interactions of race, class, gender, age, and spatial location on youth education and overall socio-emotional development. The social and cultural context of where students learn, play, and work significantly shape youth's identities and agency. Similarly, gender plays an important role on students’ academic and social development. The Urban Girls series brings scholarly attention to the unique, yet diverse, cultural experiences and identities of adolescent girls and young women being socialized in urban contexts. Authors explore and theorize how young women's racialized and gendered experiences in their families, communities, and schools and larger social contexts foster agency, resilience, and resistance. Proposals for this series can be emailed to Series Editor Venus Evans-Winters at vevansw@ilstu.edu.
4 publications
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Who Do They Think They Are?
Teenage Girls and Their Avatars in Spaces of Social Online Communication©2010 Textbook -
Employment Conditions of Business in Slovakia
©2014 Monographs -
Curriculum in the Postmodern Condition
©2000 Textbook -
Girls’ Sexualities and the Media
©2013 Textbook -
Teenagers in Estonia: Values and Behaviour
©2010 Edited Collection -
Counterstorytelling Narratives of Latino Teenage Boys
From «Vergüenza» to «Échale Ganas»©2015 Textbook -
The Late Postcolonial Condition
Twenty-First-Century Reconfigurations in the Literatures of Portuguese-Speaking Africa©2025 Monographs