TILBAGE TIL GADEN: Børn og unges liv på gaden i Nairobi

Forfattere

  • Malene Molding

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/ta.v0i38.115220

Resumé

Malene Molding: Back to the Street:

Young People Living in the Streets of

Nairobi

The article deals with people who live and

work on the streets of Nairobi, Kenya. It is

based on fieldwork conducted in 1995-1996

by the author, who at that time was working

at a rehabilitation centre for Street giris. The

article aims to identify pull-factors, i.e.

factors which, to young people, make Street

life appear as an attractive alternative to

other apparently desirable lifestyles. Thus, it

differs in focus from other studies aiming to

identify and explain so-called push factors,

i.e. factors such as political, economic or

social conditions that initially cause young

people to choose to leave home and take to

the streets. Inspired by sociologist Pierre

Bourdieu, the author regards Street life as a

lifestyle that unfolds in a social field

characterised by specific codes of conduct

and competitive social positions of symbolic

Capital. By introducing the concept of “Street

life expertise” and discussing its linkage to

motivation and identification, the author

argues that Street life appears attractive to

people who have established social com-

children’s bodily experiences, are shown to

be in conflict with the children’s

perspectives.

Downloads

Publiceret

1998-09-01

Citation/Eksport

Molding, M. (1998). TILBAGE TIL GADEN: Børn og unges liv på gaden i Nairobi. Tidsskriftet Antropologi, (38). https://doi.org/10.7146/ta.v0i38.115220

Nummer

Sektion

Artikler