This report explores young Australians’ attitudes toward key political institutions and their civic engagement. Data was collected from the Life Patterns Cohort 2 participants who were 32 years of age in 2020. The report is framed by debates about the expectations that might be held about young people’s political engagement and participation in formal political processes, and the extent to which disengagement is simply an age-based phenomenon or a generational shift in attitudes and approaches, which is reflected in the views of young adults. The report presents a short review of literature about citizenship experiences of Australian young people, followed by a brief overview of the methods used to collect and analyse the data. The results...
Exploring the question of community engagement and political participation by younger Australians, t...
The Youth Electoral Study (YES) examines why many young people (ages 15-25) are reluctant to exercis...
In order to confidently participate in the democratic process, citizens from liberal democracies req...
This article addresses the changing nature of civic and political engagement for young people in Aus...
The Whitlam Government had a significant impact on the lives of young people in Australia and their ...
Young people are changing the way they engage with politics and Politics is going to have to change ...
This Discussion Paper, Putting the politics back into Politics: Young people and democracy in Austra...
As citizens, young adults should be supported and encouraged to enact their basic rights and respons...
Young people’s relationship to democracy is a dynamic one. Over time, how youth, participation and c...
Democracies need an active civic society, and early adulthood is a significant period in life for be...
For democratic societies to sustain, the participation of young people in political realm is of high...
Current debates around citizenship are concerned with rethinking questions of political and social j...
Late in 2007, the Whitlam Institute, together with the University of Western Sydney (UWS) Office of ...
Recent decades have witnessed increased empirical and policy interest in children’s citizenship, par...
The health of Australian democracy and its constituent parts (citizens, political parties, parliamen...
Exploring the question of community engagement and political participation by younger Australians, t...
The Youth Electoral Study (YES) examines why many young people (ages 15-25) are reluctant to exercis...
In order to confidently participate in the democratic process, citizens from liberal democracies req...
This article addresses the changing nature of civic and political engagement for young people in Aus...
The Whitlam Government had a significant impact on the lives of young people in Australia and their ...
Young people are changing the way they engage with politics and Politics is going to have to change ...
This Discussion Paper, Putting the politics back into Politics: Young people and democracy in Austra...
As citizens, young adults should be supported and encouraged to enact their basic rights and respons...
Young people’s relationship to democracy is a dynamic one. Over time, how youth, participation and c...
Democracies need an active civic society, and early adulthood is a significant period in life for be...
For democratic societies to sustain, the participation of young people in political realm is of high...
Current debates around citizenship are concerned with rethinking questions of political and social j...
Late in 2007, the Whitlam Institute, together with the University of Western Sydney (UWS) Office of ...
Recent decades have witnessed increased empirical and policy interest in children’s citizenship, par...
The health of Australian democracy and its constituent parts (citizens, political parties, parliamen...
Exploring the question of community engagement and political participation by younger Australians, t...
The Youth Electoral Study (YES) examines why many young people (ages 15-25) are reluctant to exercis...
In order to confidently participate in the democratic process, citizens from liberal democracies req...