This article explores how children make, manage, or avoid friendships in super-diverse primary school settings. We draw on interviews and pictorial data from 78 children, aged 8–9 years across three local London primary schools to identify particular friendship groupings and the extent to which they followed existing patterns of social division. Children in the study did recognise social and cultural differences, but their friendship perceptions, affections, conflicts and practices meant that the way in which difference impacted relationships was partial and unstable. Friendship practices in the routine settings of school involved interactions across difference, but also entrenchments around similarity
This study examined direct and interactive effects of social–emotional adjustment, national and ethn...
This article details a study which investigated the social acceptance and friendships of children wi...
Cross-ethnic friendships are likely to constitute an important feature of children’s social world in...
This article explores how children make, manage, or avoid friendships in super-diverse primary schoo...
This two year qualitative project, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, explores the ...
This paper reports on a project exploring the friendships of children and adults in ‘super-diverse’ ...
The study reported here examined what it is like to be and have friends and how developing conceptio...
This paper explores the interaction of ethnicity and friendship in a kindergarten in England. Existi...
Time, space and presences: Bangladeshi girls' friendships in an English primary school.The study rep...
Drawing on data from a project exploring children's and adults’ friendships across social class and ...
This study examined current cross-ethnic friendship patterns in secondary schools around London, UK,...
This article is available open access through the publisher’s website at the link below. Copyright ©...
This paper looks at the different ways that children practice, understand and invest in friendship d...
This paper draws on a qualitative data set from a recently completed research project that uses educ...
In this article, the author discusses her research on children\u27s perspectives of interracial and ...
This study examined direct and interactive effects of social–emotional adjustment, national and ethn...
This article details a study which investigated the social acceptance and friendships of children wi...
Cross-ethnic friendships are likely to constitute an important feature of children’s social world in...
This article explores how children make, manage, or avoid friendships in super-diverse primary schoo...
This two year qualitative project, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, explores the ...
This paper reports on a project exploring the friendships of children and adults in ‘super-diverse’ ...
The study reported here examined what it is like to be and have friends and how developing conceptio...
This paper explores the interaction of ethnicity and friendship in a kindergarten in England. Existi...
Time, space and presences: Bangladeshi girls' friendships in an English primary school.The study rep...
Drawing on data from a project exploring children's and adults’ friendships across social class and ...
This study examined current cross-ethnic friendship patterns in secondary schools around London, UK,...
This article is available open access through the publisher’s website at the link below. Copyright ©...
This paper looks at the different ways that children practice, understand and invest in friendship d...
This paper draws on a qualitative data set from a recently completed research project that uses educ...
In this article, the author discusses her research on children\u27s perspectives of interracial and ...
This study examined direct and interactive effects of social–emotional adjustment, national and ethn...
This article details a study which investigated the social acceptance and friendships of children wi...
Cross-ethnic friendships are likely to constitute an important feature of children’s social world in...