A3 Book section, Chapters in research books
On Equal Terms? : On Implementing Infants’ Cultural Rights (2021)


Bonsdorff, P. V. (2021). On Equal Terms? : On Implementing Infants’ Cultural Rights. In E. Eriksen Ødegaard, & J. Spord Borgen (Eds.), Childhood Cultures in Transformation : 30 Years of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in Action towards Sustainability (pp. 37-53). Brill Sense. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004445666_003


JYU authors or editors


Publication details

All authors or editorsBonsdorff, Pauline von

Parent publicationChildhood Cultures in Transformation : 30 Years of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in Action towards Sustainability

Parent publication editorsEriksen Ødegaard, Elin; Spord Borgen, Jorunn

ISBN978-90-04-43368-7

eISBN978-90-04-44566-6

Publication year2021

Pages range37-53

Number of pages in the book296

PublisherBrill Sense

Place of PublicationLeiden

Publication countryNetherlands

Publication languageEnglish

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1163/9789004445666_003

Publication open accessOpenly available

Publication channel open accessOpen Access channel

Publication is parallel published (JYX)https://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/73545


Abstract

How can we implement infants’ cultural rights? Is there even reason to confer such rights to non-speaking children, or is it enough that we recognise slightly older children as culturally active individuals? Acknowledging children’s intellectual capacities and their right to be heard in matters that concern them are important threads in research on children and ideals of childrearing during the last hundred years. This development is parallel with the one leading from the Declaration of the Rights of the Child in 1923 to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1989. The spirit of human rights that informs these documents cannot be underestimated. Yet reading the Convention carefully one observes that infants, literally “non-speakers”, are challenging in the discourse of human rights, which emphasises speech and language. What is an infant, then? While non-speakers, infants are highly social and communicative, using their whole body in multimodal, active and responsive gestures. This is often overlooked in both research and practices, as I show in my chapter. Instead of noticing the similarities between infants and adults, infants still tend to be represented as different and “other”, as compared to the adult. I suggests that we need a more holistic approach, which does justice to infants’ playful, interactive and affectionate initiatives. We need to be sensitive not just to what is generalizable, but also to particular contexts, situations and cultures of interaction. This way it might be possible to better acknowledge and cater for infants’ cultural rights.


Keywordschildren's rightscultural rightschild's statusbabieschild developmentcognitive developmentlanguage developmentsocial interactionnonverbal communicationimitation (behaviour)playing (children's games)aesthetics

Free keywordschildren’s cultural rights; infant communication; infant aesthetics; play; imitation theory; copycat babies


Contributing organizations


Ministry reportingYes

VIRTA submission year2021

JUFO rating1


Last updated on 2024-12-10 at 08:45