About
us
The online
Journal of Urban Youth Culture offers concerned scholars the opportunity to
contribute to our awareness and understanding. Diverse young people
in the broad spectrum of urban environments face a rapidly changing
world, one with increasingly fewer positive alternatives for those without
the skills to compete in the Information Age. The overarching goal of
this Journal is to provide a place where people who care about the future
these young people face can share fresh ideas and insights. Among the
many questions the Journal will address are:
- How
is life changing for youngsters growing up in an urban environment?
What challenges and opportunities do they face? What role does youth
culture play in shaping the future for them and their children?
- Why
do some youngsters succeed and others fail? How can the public, private,
and non-profit sectors work together to promote positive youth development?
What does that mean in a contemporary urban environment?
- How
can government do a better job of enlisting the power of the community
in ensuring each youngster reaches his or her full potential? How
can society do a better job of harnessing informal social control
instead of the formal juvenile justice and criminal justice systems?
- How
must the juvenile justice and criminal justice systems change to promote
positive youth development? What are the incentives and disincentives
and the institutional obstacles and barriers to such changes?
- What
are the causes and cures of disproportionate minority confinement
of youth?
- What
can be done to strengthen families and community as positive forces
in the lives of young people?
Boldness
is the hallmark of this Journal, in both content and tone. We encourage
contributions from both academic and non-traditional scholars. The urgency
of the challenges that young people face are such that more must be
done to promote discussion among researchers, public policymakers, and
practitioners. Our goal is to harness the interactivity of the Internet
as a tool in promoting and expanding this important conversation.
We also
encourage young people to contribute to our Youth Gallery, so that we
maintain the all-important contact with the young people we care about.
As adults, we must always strive to find new ways to hear the voices
of the young and to include them in decisions about their future.
Carl S.
Taylor
Senior Editor |