'Adultism' is a predisposition towards
adults, which some see as biased against children, youth, and all young people who aren't addressed or viewed as adults. Adultism is popularly used to describe any
discrimination against young people and is distinguished from
ageism, which is simply prejudice on the grounds of age; not specifically against youth. Adultism is ostensibly caused by fear of
children and
youth.
[1]
Etymology and usage
Coinage
The word adultism first appears in
psychology literature in 1933, when it was defined as a condition wherein a child possessed adult-like "physique and
spirit". It was exemplified by,
:A boy of 12 and a girl of 13 who had the spirit and personality of adults.... They were placed in institutions because of stealing and prostitution. These forms of
precocity lead the individual into difficulties and should be recognized early in the development of the individual.
[2]
This definition has been superseded by another from a late 1970s journal article proposing that adultism is the abuse of the power that adults have over children. The author identified examples of adultism not only in parents but in teachers, psychotherapists, the clergy, police, judges, and juries.
[3]
Co-Counseling adopted the term in the late 1980s to describe "the
oppression of and
discrimination against people who are young."
[4] Since then the term has come to describe any
mistreatment or
silencing of
children and/or
youth.
[5]
In 1996, Jenny Sazama, an adultism expert with an organization called
Youth On Board, explained that,
This definition is now used widely by youth-serving organizations and education institutions seeking to counter the effects of adultism. The
Child Welfare League of America writes,
While not meeting universal acceptance, one national media organization promotes the notion that "adultism is the foundation for all forms of oppression," due to the commonality of every person's having experienced said discrimination.
[6]
Illustrating the commonality of this problem, local youth-serving organizations increasingly address adultism. A program in
Oakland,
California, describes the impact of adultism, which "hinders the development of youth, in particular, their self-esteem and self-worth, ability to form positive relationships with caring adults, or even see adults as allies."
[7]
The Texas Network of Youth Services offers a
list of traits associated with adultism.
Similar terms
Adultism is a generalization of
paternalism, allowing for the broad force of adulthood beyond males, and may be witnessed in the infantalization of children and youth. It has been proposed
pedophobia (the fear of children) and
ephebiphobia (the fear of youth) are antecendents to adultism.
[8] Tokophobia, the fear of childbirth, may also be a precursor;
gerontophobia, or its antonym,
gerontocracy, may be extensions of adultism.
Similar terms such as
adult privilege,
adultarchy, and
adultcentrism/adultocentrism have been proposed as alternatives which are more
morphologically parallel. Some activists alternatively call adultism "youthism," equating it to
sexism and
heterosexism.
[9] The dilemma inherent in this term is present in other activist circles, where "youthism" is employed to indicate "one form of ageism which describes people who hold beliefs or take actions advocating unfavourable balance of power or resources toward the 'younger' generations."
[10] (See ''jeunism'' in the following paragraph.)
At least one prominent organization
[11][12] (and articles on Wikipedia) address discrimination against youth as
ageism, which is any form of discrimination against anyone due to their age, whatever it may be. However, another national organization counters this, arguing that "addressing adultist behavior by calling it ageism is discrimination against youth in itself."
[13]
The opposite of adultism is
jeunism, which is defined as the preference of young people and adolescents over adults.
Causes
In his seminal 1978 article, Flasher explained that adultism is born of the belief that children are inferior, professing that adultism can be manifested as excessive nurturing, possessiveness, or over-restrictiveness, all of which are consciously or unconsciously geared toward excessive control of a child.
[14]
Recently, theologians Heather Eaton and Matthew Fox proposed, "Adultism derives from adults repressing the inner child."
[15] John Holt stated, "An understanding of adultism might begin to explain what I mean when I say that much of what is known as
children's art is an adult invention."
[16] That perspective is seemingly supported by
Maya Angelou, who remarked:
Classification of adultism
Experts have identified multiple forms of adultism, offering a
typology that includes internalized adultism,
[17] institutionalized adultism,
[18] cultural adultism, and other forms.
Internalized adultism
A
University of Michigan researcher asserts that internalized adultism causes youth to "question their own legitimacy, doubt their ability to make a difference" and perpetuate a "culture of silence" among young people.
[19] "Adultism convinces us as children that children don't really count," reports an investigative study, and it "becomes extremely important to us [children] to have the approval of adults and be 'in good' with them, even if it means betraying our fellow children. This aspect of internalized adultism leads to such phenomena as tattling on our siblings or being the 'teacher's pet,' to name just two examples."
[20] Other examples of internalized adultism include many forms of violence imposed upon children and youth by adults who are reliving the violence they faced as young people, such as
corporal punishment,
sexual abuse,
verbal abuse, and community incidents that include store policies prohibiting youth from visiting shops without adults, and police, teachers, or parents chasing young people from areas without just cause.
[21]
Institutional adultism
Institutional adultism may be apparent in any instance of
systemic bias, where formalized limitations or demands are placed on people simply because of their young age. Policies, laws, rules, organizational structures, and systematic procedures each serve as mechanisms to leverage, perpetuate, and instill adultism throughout society. These limitations are often reinforced through physical force, coercion or police actions and are often seen as double-standards.
[22] This treatment is increasingly seen as a form of
gerontocracy.
[23] [24]
Institutions perpetuating adultism may include the fudiciary, legal, educational, communal, religious, and governmental sectors of a community. For examples see:
★
Over-medicating children[25]
★
Compulsory education
★
Access to contraceptives
★
Curfews
★
Criminalization[26]
★
Drinking age
★
Age of candidacy
★
Access to healthcare[27]
★
Policing
★
Freedom of religion
★
The Draft (
Men's rights)
★
Voting age
★
Age segregation in schools
★
Child soldiers
★ ''See also''
Legal issues affecting adolescence ''and''
Total institutions
Cultural adultism
'Cultural adultism' is a much more ambiguous, yet much more prevalent, form of
discrimination or
intolerance towards youth. Any restriction or exploitation of people because of their young age, as opposed to their ability, comprehension, or
capacity, may be said to be adultist. These restrictions are often attributed to euphemisms afforded to adults on the basis of age alone, such as "better judgment" or "the wisdom of age." A parenting magazine editor comments, "Most of the time people talk differently to kids than to adults, and often they act differently, too."
[28] This summarizes cultural adultism. For examples see:
★
Child abuse
★
Academic misconceptions of youth
★
Commericalization
★
Online filters
★
Corporal punishment
★
Literature
★
Child labor
★
Mass marketing to youth
★
Peer pressure
★
Child prostitution
★
Controversy over sagging
★
Scapegoating
★ Stereotypes about
Youth subculture
★
Teen sex
★
Drinking age
★
Generation gap
Results
Social stratification
Discrimination against age is increasingly recognized as a form of
bigotry in social and cultural settings around the world. An increasing number of social institutions are acknowledging the positions of children and youth as an
oppressed minority group.
[29] Many youth are rallying against the adultist myths spread through mass media from the 1970s through the 1990s.
[30][31]
Research compiled from two sources (a Cornell University nation-wide study, and a Harvard University study on youth) has shown that social stratification between age groups causes
stereotyping and generalization; for instance, the media-perpetuated myth that all adolescents are immature, violent and rebellious.
[32] Opponents of adultism contend that this has led to growing number of youth, academics, researchers, and other adults rallying against adultism and ageism, such as organizing education programs, protesting statements, and creating organizations devoted to publicizing the concept and addressing it.
[33]
Simultaneously, research shows that young people who struggle against adultism within community organizations have a high rate of impact upon said agencies, as well as their peers, the adults who work with them, and the larger community to which the organization belongs
[34]
Cultural responses
There may be many negative effects of adultism, including
ephebiphobia and a growing
generation gap. A reactive social response to adultism takes the form of the
children's rights movement, led by young people who strike against being exploited for their labor. Numerous popular outlets are employed to strike out against adultism, particularly
music and
movies. Additionally, many youth-led social change efforts have inherently responded to adultism, particularly those associated with
youth activism and
student activism, each of which in their own respects have struggled with the effects of institutionalized and cultural adultism.
[33]
Academic developments
A growing number of governmental, academic, and educational institutions around the globe have created policy, conducted studies, and created publications that respond to many of the insinuations and implications of adultism. Much of popular researcher
Margaret Mead's work can be said to be a response to adultism.
[36] Current researchers whose work analyzes the effects of adultism include sociologist
Mike Males[37] and critical theorist
Henry Giroux.
Addressing adultism
Any inanimate or animate exhibition of adultism is said to be "adultist". This may include behaviors, policies, practices, institutions, or individuals.
Educator
John Holt proposed that teaching adults about adultism is a vital step to addressing the effects of adultism
[38], and at least one organization
[39] and one curriculum
[40] do just that. Several educators have created curricula that seek to teach youth about adultism, as well.
[41] Currently, organizations responding to the negative effects of adultism include the United Nations, which has conducted a great deal of research
[42] in addition to recognizing the need to
counter adultism through policy and programs. The
CRC has particular Articles (5 and 12) which are specifically committed to combating adultism. The international organization Human Rights Watch has done the same.
[43]
Common practice accepts the engagement of
youth voice and the formation of
youth/adult partnerships as essential steps to resisting adultism.
[44]
References
1. Scraton, P. (1997) ''"Childhood" in "crisis"?'' Routledge. p. 25.
2. Courbon, P. (1933). Mental adultism and precocious growth of the personality. ''Annales Medico-Psychologiques. 87'', 355-362.
3. Flasher, J. (1978) Adultism. ''Adolescence 13''(51) Fall 1978, 517-523.
4. Re-Evaluation Counseling website
5. Freechild.org on Adultism
6. American Pictures
7. Youth Together Glossary
8. Fletcher, A. (2006) ''Washington Youth Voice Handbook'' Olympia, WA: CommonAction
9. Youth Liberation: An Interview With Brian Dominick on Znet
10. Kelly, B. "'Youthism' and Ageism in Our Movement?" Next Left Notes (2006).
11. Thread from National Youth Rights Association Online Forums re: Ageism vs. Adultism
12. Alex Koroknay-Palicz's blog
13. Young, K & Sazama, J (2006) ''15 Points to Successfully Involving Youth in Decision-Making.'' Boston: Youth On Board.
14. Flasher, J. (1978) Adultism. Adolescence 13(51) Fal 1978, 521.
15. Eaton, H & Fox, M. "Chapter 10: Transcendent Spirit: Child Honoring and Religion." in Cavoukian, R. (Ed) & Olfman, S. (Ed). (2006). ''Child honoring: How to turn this world around.'' Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers/Greenwood Publishing Group.
16. Holt, J. (Ed) ''Teach your own: The John Holt book of homeschooling.'' Perseus Publishing.
17. Get The Word Out! Jenny Sazama (2004). p.12
18. Hernandez, D. & Rehman, B. (eds). (2002)''Colonize This!: Young Women of Color on Today's Feminism''. Seal Press
19. Adults as Allies (1998) WK Kellogg Foundation.
20. Cult Awareness and Information Center
21. Understanding adultism: A key to developing positive youth-adult relationships. by John Bell
22. Males, M. (1997) ''Framing Youth: 10 Myths about the Next Generation.'' "Courts have explicitly ruled that policy-makers may impose adult responsibilities and punishments on individual youths as if they were adults at the same time laws and policies abrogate adolescents’ rights en masse as if they were children."
23. Monitor Breakfast with James Carville and Stanley Greenberg "This is not class warfare, this is generational warfare. This administration and old wealthy people have declared war on young people. That is the real war that is going on here. And that is the war we've got to talk about." - James Carville
24. Gatto, J.T. (2002) The Underground History of American Education "Children allowed to take responsibility and given a serious part in the larger world are always superior to those merely permitted to play and be passive. At the age of twelve, Admiral Farragut got his first command."
25. Breeding, J. (n.d.) Does ADHD Even Exist? The Ritalin Sham Sunriver, OR: The Natural Child Project.
26. Giroux, H. ''Take Back Higher Education: Race, Youth, and the Crisis of Democracy in the Post-Civil Rights Era (2004).
27. Institionalized discrimination is also viewed as structural violence. See Kelly, P. "Fighting for Hope" (1984) for specific evidence of instutional adultism in healthcare, identified as structural violence. "A third of the 2,000 million people in the developing countries are starving or suffering from malnutrition. Twenty-five per cent of their children die before their fifth birthday... Less than 10 per cent of the 15 million children who died this year had been vaccinated against the six most common and dangerous children's diseases. Vaccinating every child costs £3 per child. But not doing so costs us five million lives a year. These are classic examples of 'structural violence'."
28. Treating children as equals. Wright, J. New Renaissance Magazine (2001)."
29. (2006) ''15 Points to Successfully Involving Youth in Decision-Making.'' Boston: Youth On Board. p 95.
30. (2004) "Making Space - Making Change: Profiles of Youth-Led and Youth-Driven Organizations". Movement Strategy Center. p 17. Retrieved 9/7/07.
31. Giroux, H. "The Abandoned Generation: Democracy Beyond the Culture of Fear" (2003).
32. (2006) ''15 Points to Successfully Involving Youth in Decision-Making.'' Boston: Youth On Board. p 94.
33. (2006) ''15 Points to Successfully Involving Youth in Decision-Making.'' Boston: Youth On Board. p 92.
34. Zeldin, S, Kusgen-McDaniel, A, & Topitzes, D. "Youth In Decision-Making: A Study on The Impacts of Youth on Adults and Organizations" (2001).
35. (2006) ''15 Points to Successfully Involving Youth in Decision-Making.'' Boston: Youth On Board. p 92.
36. Michell, L.M. (2006) "Child-Centered? Thinking critically about children's drawings as a visual research method." ''Visual Anthropology Review. 22''(1) Spring. pp 68.
37. Chu, J. (1997) "Navigating the Media Environment: How Youth Claim a Place through Zines," ''Social Justice. 24''. p 147.
38. Holt, J. (2003) ''Teach Your Own'' Perseus Publishing.
39. Youth On Board
40. Creighton, A. & Kivel, P. (1992) ''Helping Teens Stop Violence: A Practical Guide for Counselors, Educators, and Parents'' Hunter House.
41. Miller-McLemore, B. (2003) ''Let the Children Come: Reimagining Childhood from a Christian Perspective'' Josey-Bass.
42. The Evolving Capacities of the Child UNICEF. (2005)
43. The Difference between Youth and Adults HRW online.
44. (n.d.) Adultism Resources The Freechild Project website.
See also
★
Ageism
★
Age discrimination
★
Ephebiphobia
★
Gerontocracy
★
Prejudice
★
National Youth Rights Association
★
The Freechild Project
★
Children's rights
★
Youth rights
★
The Mosquito
External links
★ Bell, J. (n.d.) ''
Understanding Adultism: A Key to Developing Positive Youth-Adult Relationships.'' Olympia, WA: The Freechild Project.
★
Adultism and the Roots of Authoritarianism
★ Velázquez, J. and Garin-Jones, M. (2003)
"Adultism and Cultural Competence" ''Children's Voice'' Child Welfare League of America. January/February 2003.
★
Unit on Adultism from SocialJusticeEducation.org, originally located at
Creighton University.
★ Tate, T. (2003) "Insist or enlist? Adultism versus climates of excellence." ''Reclaiming Children and Youth, 12''(1) p. 40-46.