14 - ‘My aim is to take over Zane Lowe’: young people’s imagined futures at a community radio station
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2021
Summary
Introduction
Youth service provision, which is the responsibility of the local state, has seen significant reduction in available central funding since the UK financial crisis of 2007. Cuts to government spending in the UK have significantly affected young people. Figures released by the House of Commons show that 493,000 young people aged 16–24 were unemployed in March to May 2019 (Francis-Devine, 2019). This unemployment rate sits alongside cuts to state support for young people. For instance, under the 2010 to 2015 coalition government, Education Maintenance Allowance for 16–18-year-old pupils in education or training was cut. Correspondingly, there has been a significant increase in university fees in the UK. This combination has resulted in heightened uncertainty for young people who may feel both unsupported and ‘priced out’ of certain aspirations for their future.
Through the case study of a community youth-led radio station, KCC Live, this chapter explores the role of voluntary organisations in the aspirations of young people and the impact of budget cuts for the transitions of volunteers. KCC Live is a youth-led community radio station in Knowsley, neighbouring Liverpool, UK, to explore the imagined futures of young people not in education, employment or training (NEET) who volunteer at the station. This chapter proceeds as follows. First, I present a brief overview of literature on youth transitions and introduce the concept of young people's ‘possible selves’. I then outline the methods used in this study, also introducing KCC Live and the Metropolitan Borough of Knowsley (referred to as Knowsley hereafter) where the radio station is based. Then I present the findings of this research around three themes: making it big; less defined possible selves; and the strength of weak ties. This chapter contributes to existing literature by providing an evidence-based consideration of contemporary ideas of youth as concerned about their futures, while critiquing existing understandings of young people and ‘celebrity goals’ (see Allen and Mendick, 2013 for further discussion of young people's uses of celebrity). The central argument of this chapter is that the achievement of possible selves often relies on social bonds rather than solely the actions/desires of the individual, and thus social capital matters.
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- Growing Up and Getting By , pp. 269 - 286Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2021