Child Participation in the Philippines: Reconstructing the Legal Discourse of Children and Childhood

Type Thesis or Dissertation - Degree of Doctor
Title Child Participation in the Philippines: Reconstructing the Legal Discourse of Children and Childhood
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
URL https://tspace.library.utoronto.ca/bitstream/1807/43724/1/Salvador_Rommel_M_201311_SJD_thesis.pdf
Abstract
This thesis explores the participation of children within legal discourse by looking at how laws and policies engage or disengage children. The basic premise is that to understand children’s participation is to confront the discourse of children and childhood where we uncover underlying assumptions, interests and agendas that inform our conception of who the child is and what the experience of childhood entails. Specifically, the thesis examines child participation within the Philippine legal framework by looking at the status, conditions and circumstances of children in four contexts: family, educational system, work environment and youth justice system. It argues that our conceptions of children and childhood are not only produced from a particular discourse but in turn are productive of a particular construction and practices reflected in the legal system. In its examination, the thesis reveals a complex Philippine legal framework shaped by competing paradigms of children and childhood that both give meaning to and respond to children’s engagements. On the one hand, there is a dominant discourse based on universal patterns of development and socialization that views children as objects of adult control and influence. But at the same time, there is some concrete attraction to an emerging paradigm influenced by childhood studies and the child rights movement that opens up opportunities for children’s participation.

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