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The Generation Gap: Youth Programmes and the Family

The Generation Gap: Youth Programmes and the Family Different combinations of the characteristics of sex, age, status and ethnicity underlie different preferred ways of living. Youth programmes that heed these characteristics might reduce the alienation often underlying the generation gap, but to be effective such programmes will need to offer youth creative and supportive opportunities for youth to experiment with living. The youth worker has the equally important opportunity to provide information which will enable adults to understand the problems faced by youth in urban society. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Australian Journal of Social Issues Wiley

The Generation Gap: Youth Programmes and the Family

Australian Journal of Social Issues , Volume 7 (2) – Jun 1, 1972

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References (13)

Publisher
Wiley
Copyright
© Australian Social Policy Association
eISSN
1839-4655
DOI
10.1002/j.1839-4655.1972.tb00488.x
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Different combinations of the characteristics of sex, age, status and ethnicity underlie different preferred ways of living. Youth programmes that heed these characteristics might reduce the alienation often underlying the generation gap, but to be effective such programmes will need to offer youth creative and supportive opportunities for youth to experiment with living. The youth worker has the equally important opportunity to provide information which will enable adults to understand the problems faced by youth in urban society.

Journal

Australian Journal of Social IssuesWiley

Published: Jun 1, 1972

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