Abstract
An understanding of children’s own perspectives on their relationships and experience is essential in developing a comprehensive
‘whole child’ perspective on well-being in all its domains. Eliciting authentic accounts of children’s experience requires
an approach which positions children as key informants, central to the research enterprise. This article reports some of the
findings of a neighbourhood based study which sought to explore aspects of children’s daily lives, particularly those autonomous
spaces of childhood away from the gaze and direction of adults, within which children enact and transact their daily lives.
The study findings reveal the children to be significant users of their neighbourhood with detailed local knowledge and expertise
and a unique perspective on the opportunities and risks they encounter. Their social relationships, especially their friends
and friendships, were found to be critical to their sense of satisfaction, in tandem with the opportunity the neighbourhood
terrain afforded for physically active movement and play. Friends and friendship are experienced by children as essential
to their well-being and play is the means by which they actualise this key relationship. Consistently the children named ‘space’
and ‘friends’ as the things that they most liked about their neighbourhood.
‘whole child’ perspective on well-being in all its domains. Eliciting authentic accounts of children’s experience requires
an approach which positions children as key informants, central to the research enterprise. This article reports some of the
findings of a neighbourhood based study which sought to explore aspects of children’s daily lives, particularly those autonomous
spaces of childhood away from the gaze and direction of adults, within which children enact and transact their daily lives.
The study findings reveal the children to be significant users of their neighbourhood with detailed local knowledge and expertise
and a unique perspective on the opportunities and risks they encounter. Their social relationships, especially their friends
and friendships, were found to be critical to their sense of satisfaction, in tandem with the opportunity the neighbourhood
terrain afforded for physically active movement and play. Friends and friendship are experienced by children as essential
to their well-being and play is the means by which they actualise this key relationship. Consistently the children named ‘space’
and ‘friends’ as the things that they most liked about their neighbourhood.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-20
- DOI 10.1007/s12187-012-9146-6
- Authors
- Margaret Rogers, School of Social Work and Social Policy, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
- Journal Child Indicators Research
- Online ISSN 1874-8988
- Print ISSN 1874-897X