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Anthropological attention to children and childhoods has had an uneven but lengthy history, both within the discipline and in interdisciplinary endeavors. Recently, there has been a resurgence of interest in the study of children, with work often carried out under the rubrics of “Childhood Studies” or the “Anthropology of Childhoods.” In these frameworks, children are at once developing beings, in possession of agency, and to varying degrees vulnerable. It has been a hallmark of anthropological work to recognize that these attributes manifest themselves in different times and places, and under particular social, political, economic, and moral circumstances and conditions. The five articles in this “In Focus” put forward some key challenges and opportunities for the anthropological study of children and childhoods.
Bluebond‐Langner et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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