"Receipt Please!" Imagining Youth Justice and Creative Methods
Saturday 9 November 2024, 2:00pm to 5:00pm
Venue
The Storey, , Lancaster, Lancashire, LA11TH - View MapOpen to
All Lancaster University (non-partner) students, Alumni, Applicants, External Organisations, Families and young people, Postgraduates, Prospective International Students, Prospective Postgraduate Students, Prospective Undergraduate Students, Public, Staff, UndergraduatesRegistration
Free to attend - registration requiredEvent Details
Let’s get creative about justice! ️ This workshop flips the script on ‘crime and punishment’ to explore how imagination and creativity can help youth confront injustice, build resilience, and create change.
At this event we invite you to come along and experiment with how creative methods can be used to both build personal resilience and to highlight and share difficult or challenging experiences relating to issues of social and youth justice. This event aims to be both fun and interactive, whilst also offering the opportunity to test ways of airing challenging issues faced by young people in a creative way.
Questions to Stimulate Imagination:
- How can everyday life be experienced punitively or unjustly?
- How can creativity shed light on these experiences?
- How can creativity support resilience, as we seeks inclusion and justice, in the everyday?
What’s it about?
‘I’ll Have My Receipt Please and Thank You.’ Where am I going with this? Well, imagination, that’s where! Even your grocery list can benefit from creative treatment. Don’t you agree? Anything in life benefits from imagination. Then why not justice for youth? Yet creativity is the overlooked third cousin, the neglected offspring, of public policy and this can lead to policies around youth and youth justice that are totally lacking in originality – thereby simply reproducing and rationalising inequality.
Consider, for instance, that when it comes to youth and justice the typical focus has been on crime and punishment—on bad boys and bad girls. Taking an innovative, creative approach, this workshop centres a discussion on youth’s everyday experiences of exclusion, injustice, and resilience. The workshop asks three questions: first, how can youth’s everyday life be experienced punitively or unjustly? Second, how can creativity shed light on these experiences? Third, how can creativity support resilience, as youth seek inclusion and justice, in their everyday?
Contact Details
Name | Jo Taylor |
Website |