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Creating Space for Youth Voice: Implications of Youth Disclosure Experiences for Youth-Centered Research
Author(s) -
Roberta L. Woodgate,
Pauline Tennent,
Sarah Barriage
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
international journal of qualitative methods
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.414
H-Index - 29
ISSN - 1609-4069
DOI - 10.1177/1609406920958974
Subject(s) - terminology , agency (philosophy) , context (archaeology) , youth studies , autonomy , public relations , phrase , space (punctuation) , positive youth development , sociology , psychology , political science , gender studies , developmental psychology , linguistics , paleontology , biology , law , philosophy , social science
This paper examines youth’s disclosure experiences within the context of chronic illness, drawing on examples from IN•GAUGE, an on-going research program led by Dr. Roberta L. Woodgate. Youth’s descriptions of their disclosure experiences provide valuable insights into the ways in which they use their voice in everyday life. This examination of the disclosure experiences of youth offers a lens through which the concept of youth voice in the research process can be understood and youth’s agency foregrounded. We present implications for researchers, ethics boards, funding agencies, and others who engage in youth-centered research, and offer alternative terminology to use in characterizing the elicitation and dissemination of youth voice in the research process. We contend that conceptualizing such efforts as giving youth voice has the potential to discredit the significant agency and autonomy that youth demonstrate in sharing their stories, perspectives, and opinions within the research context. We advocate for the adoption of the phrase of providing or creating space for youth voice, as one alternative to the phrase giving youth voice

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