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Concepts of bounded agency in education, work, and the personal lives of young adults
356
Citations
15
References
2007
Year
Young AdultsEducational PsychologyWork-integrated LearningEducationAgency (Feminist Philosophy)Social ChangeAutonomySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyAdult EducationAdult LearningPersonal IdentityBounded AgencyPersonal LivesAgency (Social Cognitive Psychology)Personal HorizonsLife Course StudiesCareer DevelopmentExercise Personal AgencyRole TheoryAdult DevelopmentCultureGerman Cultural StudiesLifelong LearningDevelopmental ScienceSocial FoundationsProfessional DevelopmentLived ExperienceCultural-historical Activity Theory
This paper traces the development of a series of Anglo‐German studies on how young adults experience control and exercise personal agency as they pass through periods of transition in education and training, work, unemployment, and in their personal lives. The overarching aim has been to develop an extended dialogue between ideas and evidence to explore the beliefs and actions associated with life‐chances under differing structural and cultural conditions. What kinds of beliefs and perspectives do people have on their future possibilities? How far do they feel in control of their lives? How does people's belief in what is possible for them (their personal horizons developed within cultural and structural influences) determine their behaviours and what they perceive to be “choices”? This research contributes to the re‐conceptualization of agency as a process in which past habits and routines are contextualized and future possibilities envisaged in the contingencies of the present moment. The paper concludes by explaining the concept of “bounded agency” as an alternative to “structured individualization” as a way of understanding the experiences of people in changing social landscapes.
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