Articles
“Transformative childhood studies – a remix in inquiry, justice, and love” (2019)
ABSTRACT: The meaning of justice is never pre-given. In this manuscript, I suggest that childhood studies scholars look critically at what justice means and what it would entail for differently positioned children, youth, and communities. I map out a concept and praxis of transformative childhood studies (TCS) which involves a remix in transformative justice, childhood studies scholarship, and feminist methodology. Transformative justice (TJ) calls attention to state violence and oppression, which must be healed, not restored – so that society can be actively transformed. I draw upon specific examples from six years of fieldwork in a small high school in Camden, NJ. I argue how critical reflexivity and institutional support for bridging and placemaking can assist childhood studies scholars to engage in deeper and more mutually informed relationships with youth participants, communities, and justice movements.
Other Peer-Reviewed Articles
Silver, L.J. (2020). “Queer Reproductive Justice: Memories, Mistakes, and Motivations to Transform Kinship.” Feminist Anthropology.
Invited Manuscripts
Silver, L. J. 2022. “Radical Ethnography for Healing and Transformation.” In Kimberly Cook, Stacy Mallicoat, Renee Lamphere, and Jason M. Williams (Eds.), Survivor Criminology, Roman and Littlefield.
Silver, L.J. (2008). “The Politics of Regulation: Adolescent Mothers and the Social Context of Resiliency.” VOICES: A Publication of the Association for Feminist Anthropology, 8 (1).
Silver, L.J. (2004). “Ending Silence, Children’s Visions, and Racial Justice: A Review of ‘Racism Explained to My Daughter.’” Penn GSE Perspectives on Urban Education, 3 (1).