This article draws upon my qualitative study with 8–12-year-old British Indian children and their professional middle-class parents, to demonstrate the ways in which parental mediation of children’s digital leisure play out within the home. Using the relational lens of ‘generational order’, I identify the ways in which children ‘navigate’ their way around restrictive parental mediation of digital technologies just as parents ‘navigate’ multiple moral discourses emerging from media and policy circles imploring them to curb children’s screen-time. Understanding these ‘navigation’ strategies around children’s digital media use at home throws fresh light on parent–child relations, children’s agency and their imbrications with wider generational...
In this article, the Swedish findings from a European comparative study on 0–3-year-old children and...
Young children engaging with technologies at home: the influence of family context This paper is abo...
markdownabstractAbstract Children use electronic screens at ever younger ages, but there is sti...
As children access to the internet at ever younger ages, questions arise as to whether the use of to...
For many families, ICTs have become an indispensable part of family life. Smartphones and other digi...
As children access to the internet at ever younger ages, questions arise as to whether the use of to...
This article is about the ways in which young children engage with technological toys and resources ...
This article aims to bring to reflection the everyday life of Portuguese families with young childre...
This paper investigates practices of domestic regulation of media within the family, focusing on par...
YesThis study explores how British South Asian parents perceive their children’s technology consumpt...
This article reports a study that explored young children’s digital literacy in the home. The aim of...
In educational research, digital technology has received considerable attention, and in early childh...
Despite being often ambivalent regarding the potential benefits and risks of digital media, parents ...
Families Matter focuses on two complementary studies that document how families with young children ...
There is extensive evidence that teenagers’ social media and internet use is of considerable concern...
In this article, the Swedish findings from a European comparative study on 0–3-year-old children and...
Young children engaging with technologies at home: the influence of family context This paper is abo...
markdownabstractAbstract Children use electronic screens at ever younger ages, but there is sti...
As children access to the internet at ever younger ages, questions arise as to whether the use of to...
For many families, ICTs have become an indispensable part of family life. Smartphones and other digi...
As children access to the internet at ever younger ages, questions arise as to whether the use of to...
This article is about the ways in which young children engage with technological toys and resources ...
This article aims to bring to reflection the everyday life of Portuguese families with young childre...
This paper investigates practices of domestic regulation of media within the family, focusing on par...
YesThis study explores how British South Asian parents perceive their children’s technology consumpt...
This article reports a study that explored young children’s digital literacy in the home. The aim of...
In educational research, digital technology has received considerable attention, and in early childh...
Despite being often ambivalent regarding the potential benefits and risks of digital media, parents ...
Families Matter focuses on two complementary studies that document how families with young children ...
There is extensive evidence that teenagers’ social media and internet use is of considerable concern...
In this article, the Swedish findings from a European comparative study on 0–3-year-old children and...
Young children engaging with technologies at home: the influence of family context This paper is abo...
markdownabstractAbstract Children use electronic screens at ever younger ages, but there is sti...