What Matters and Who Matters to Young People Leaving Care : : A New Approach to Planning / / Peter Appleton.

EPDF and EPUB are available open access under CC BY NC ND licence. This publication was supported by University of Essex's open access fund. Peter Appleton builds on research interviews with care-experienced young adults, and on cross-disciplinary theories of planning and of emotions, to develo...

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Place / Publishing House:Bristol, England : : Policy Press,, [2024]
©2024
Year of Publication:2024
Edition:First edition.
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource (201 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Front Cover
  • What Matters and Who Matters to Young People Leaving Care: A New Approach to Planning
  • Copyright information
  • Table of Contents
  • List of boxes
  • About the author
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction
  • Origins of our research
  • Why is this important?
  • Purposes of the book
  • The 'shape' of the book
  • 1 Reflexivity, internal conversations, and the transition from out-of-home care
  • Preamble
  • Charelle, Danny, and their internal conversations
  • What do we mean by reflexivity?
  • Reflexivity and internal conversations
  • Reflexivity and what matters during the transition from care
  • Reflexivity and planning during the transition from care
  • 2 Reflexivity reformulated
  • Preamble
  • 'No reflexivity: no society'
  • Reflexivity on a broader front
  • Self-reflection
  • Embodiment
  • Shared deliberation and intersubjectivity
  • Mental time travel
  • A closer reading of participants' discussions of what matters and of planning
  • Reading Chapters 3-6: a rough and flexible guide
  • Reading Chapters 3-6 - a slightly more technical guide
  • Idiography
  • The exact context of the interview(s)
  • A participant's personal logic
  • Expressive and emotion-based aspects of interviews
  • Aspect realism and 'respecting the hustle'
  • Structure of each chapter in Chapters 3-6
  • 3 My family matters
  • Corrina
  • Brittany
  • Comparison
  • Articulating what/who matters
  • Planning
  • 4 A roof over my head: self-reliance matters
  • Charelle
  • Danny
  • Comparison
  • Articulating what and who matters
  • Planning
  • 5 Time future: time complex
  • Nailah
  • Tyreece
  • Comparison
  • Articulating what/who matters
  • Planning
  • 6 What matters is social: friendships and social responsibility
  • Zavie
  • Joe
  • Comparison
  • Articulating what/who matters
  • Planning
  • 7 A bridging chapter: toward a three-aspects approach to planning.
  • What matters and who matters
  • A sense of personal time
  • Shared deliberation and shared planning
  • Three aspects of planning as strengths
  • 8 From reflexivities to planning: the 'remarkable trio' of Michael Bratman
  • Michael Bratman's account of planning agency: the remarkable trio
  • Self-governance, what matters, and planning
  • Shared agency: social aspects of planning
  • Cross-temporal aspects of planning agency
  • Cross-temporal planning - under conditions of compounded adversity
  • Preamble
  • Introduction
  • A plurality of modes of planning, which Bratman acknowledges, and two critiques
  • A sense of a foreshortened future
  • Alternative, crip, and queer temporalities/non-normative logics of time
  • Logic
  • Logic as something fluid
  • Logic as life structuring in life
  • Logic as face - wearing a look - a dense field of significance
  • Logic as expressive voice, and making sense of the suppression of voice
  • Logic as not synoptic (wide-field), and not an overview, not a master narrative
  • 9 Emotions: a background framework is called into question
  • Martha Nussbaum on 'upheavals of thought'
  • Matthew Ratcliffe: emotional intentionality
  • Emotion as rupture in a person's lifeworld
  • A background framework is called into question
  • The full implications are impossible to 'pin down'
  • The two-sidedness of emotional intentionality
  • A way of revising the world
  • A broader rationality (and revision) takes time
  • Transition from out-of-home care
  • Multiple emotion ruptures
  • Development during emerging adulthood40
  • Transition itself as a rupture
  • Particular aspects of experiences before and during transition
  • 10 Planning and voice: starting points
  • Introduction
  • Flags in the mountainside
  • Recognition theory: recognition, respect, and disrespect
  • Co-design.
  • Methodological sensitivities for co-producing knowledge through enduring trustful partnerships
  • Planning - a new approach
  • Three aspects of planning
  • What matters and who matters
  • Shared deliberation and shared planning
  • A sense of personal time
  • Expressive emotion - the example of anger
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1
  • Chapter 2
  • Chapter 3
  • Chapter 4
  • Chapter 5
  • Chapter 6
  • Chapter 7
  • Chapter 8
  • Chapter 9
  • Chapter 10
  • References
  • Index.