#UrbanYouth:
How does #RacialBelonging mediate the production of #PopularTerritories & thereby unsettle + rearticulate dominant understandings of #area?

👀Read by @XazaarAdjame on the collective life in movement of #Indonesian #UrbanYouth: https://doi.org/qjnw

#Blackness #Circulation
December 17, 2025 at 6:30 PM
jfsdigital.org/2025-2/vol-3... How can #TikTok be utilized to promote #futuresthinking and #futuresliteracy and increase #engagement in #urbanyouth? Find out in this excellent exploration by Rachel Cranmer and Jenny Liu Zhang! See how they utilized #socialmedia posts and comments about the
The Seeds of Futures Engagement: Oslo’s Future Library and Mortality Awareness on TikTok * Journal of Futures Studies
Article Rachel Cranmer1*, Jenny Liu Zhang2* 1Midwest Futures, United States; Edinburgh Futures Institute, University of Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom. 2Edinburgh Futures Institute, University of...
jfsdigital.org
November 12, 2025 at 8:13 AM
Young men on South Africa’s urban margins: new book follows their lives over 10 years
South Africa’s youth, aged 15 to 34, who make up more than 50% of the country’s working age population, bear a disproportionate burden of unemployment. They have done so for more than a decade. Of this group, those aged 15 to 24 face the highest barriers to the job market, according to data from Statistics South Africa. The majority of these young people live in townships and informal settlements. A new book, ‘Making a Life: Young Men on Johannesburg’s Urban Margins’, examines how youth at Zandspruit, an informal settlement on the outskirts of Johannesburg, make a life. Anthropologist Hannah Dawson explains why she chose Zandspruit for her research and shares her findings about the sociopolitical landscape of urban settlements. Why the choice of Zandspruit for your research? It started with my arrival there in 2011 to study a wave of political protests during local elections. This sparked a much longer research journey spanning more than a decade, which this book traces. The settlement was established in the early 1990s and has grown into a densely populated area of around 50 000 people, across 14 pieces of land. The expansion of Zandspruit reflects broader trends in post-apartheid South Africa: rapid urbanisation, inadequate urban housing, rising unemployment and underemployment – including a shift from permanent to casual work, and from formal to informal employment. What sets Zandspruit apart is its location. It is near post-apartheid economic hubs such as Kya Sands, with its light industries and business parks, and Lanseria Airport, a growing freight and logistics hub earmarked for expansion under the Greater Lanseria Masterplan. It also borders affluent suburbs and golf estates. This makes it distinct from older, more isolated settlements in Johannesburg’s south. Its proximity to shopping malls, townhouse complexes, warehouses and commercial zones makes it a destination of choice for migrants. They include people seeking a foothold in the urban market from rural areas of South Africa, as well as people from other parts of the African continent. This proximity makes Zandspruit a case study for understanding how residents access urban job markets, and the connections between wage and non-wage economic activities. What do your findings tell us about the lives of young people? The book draws on research primarily with young men, whose work and lives I followed over 10 years. It shows how young men on the urban margins navigate structural unemployment and inequality by forging social ties, asserting belonging, and pursuing alternative livelihoods within what I call Zandspruit’s ‘redistributive economy’. I use the phrase ‘making a life’ to move beyond survival or income generation. A life is not only about securing food and shelter. It involves the pursuit of social connection, identity, place and dignity. For many of the young men I came to know, this often involved turning down demeaning jobs in favour of self-initiated income strategies that offered greater autonomy. These included renting out shacks, running internet cafes or car washes, or operating as mashonisas (unregistered loan sharks). Such efforts reflect more than personal resilience – they reveal how men’s social position and connections within the settlement shape access to the more lucrative niches of the local economy. These dynamics point to a broader condition facing young people in South Africa: deep and persistent material insecurity. Yet, they also show the ways in which young people, especially young men, are actively building lives in the face of profound uncertainty. They are crafting meaning and striving for something more in a context marked by chronic unemployment and inequality. What did you learn about urban inequality and living on the urban margins? The residents of Zandspruit are not equally poor or marginalised. A focus of the book is the division between ‘insiders’ – long-term residents with access to property who earn rental income – and ‘outsiders’ – new arrivals and immigrants who, as tenants, are more dependent on low-paid jobs. These distinctions shape access to land, housing, livelihoods and local recognition. Most immigrants form a precarious tenant class, while landlords tend to be established residents with long-standing ties to the settlement. Zandspruit is a deeply stratified space where social connections, property access and local citizenship determine who belongs and who benefits. By tracing men’s positions as insiders or outsiders, the book shows how these inequalities shape their economic strategies and capacity to build a life on the urban margins. What do you recommend in terms of public policy? The book doesn’t make policy recommendations. However, it speaks to key public and policy debates. Media and policy narratives often portray unemployed youth as idle and disconnected from society, ignoring the complex, often invisible, economic activities and arrangements that structure their lives. While informal and unstable, these pursuits reflect resourcefulness, local knowledge, and a conscious rejection of degrading labour. It challenges the idea that informal entrepreneurship can solve youth unemployment. Most enterprises are too precarious to lift young people out of poverty. It also questions the notion that informal settlements are simply ghettos of exclusion and poverty. Instead, it highlights the inequalities within the settlement and calls for greater attention to be paid to the local economies and social orders being forged within these spaces. Understanding these dynamics is crucial to rethinking how we respond to unemployment, the urban housing crisis and inequality in South Africa. – Hannah Dawson is a senior lecturer of anthropology and development studies at the University of Johannesburg. – The Conversation The post Young men on South Africa’s urban margins: new book follows their lives over 10 years appeared first on The Namibian.
newsfeed.facilit8.network
June 2, 2025 at 9:27 AM
Another gem from our latest issue! ✨

How do young people in China build meaningful connections with strangers? Haoyan Zhuang (Renmin University of China) explores 'lianjie' — a form of relationality emerging in urban co-living spaces.

doi.org/10.1080/1683...

#UrbanYouth #CoLiving #ChinaStudies
From guanxi to lianjie: stranger intimacy and co-living in contemporary China
Urban youth in China increasingly prioritize lianjie (连接)—a social matrix and lifestyle based on connections with strangers, distinguishing it from guanxi, which is rooted in acquaintance relations...
doi.org
May 8, 2025 at 10:04 AM
Japan's urban youth are increasingly vulnerable, facing rising crime and insecurity. We need urgent, comprehensive social measures—not just quick fixes—to protect the next generation. #UrbanYouth #Japan #SocialCrisis www.ucanews.com/news/the-wor...
The worrying trend of vulnerable youth in urban Japan - UCA News
It is not merely a matter of law enforcement but a complex issue pointing to economic inequality and family breakdowns
www.ucanews.com
December 4, 2024 at 2:59 AM