Abstract

This article explores how youth and social circus (ysc) aims to promote social well-being through the examination of educational initiatives funded by the EU to standardise pedagogical approaches in the European sector. Ysc refers to programs offering circus activities with the goal of personal and community development, mental and social well-being, and social change, rather than the training of professional artists. To address concerns around the term well-being and how it has been interpreted to further a neoliberal ideological position, the term social well-being is employed and qualified in relation to the work of Corey Lee M. Keyes (1998). Three aspects of Keyes model of social well-being (social integration, social contribution and social acceptance) are engaged to analyse the guidebook for trainers used as part of Circus Transformation (CTF), one of the best-known ysc trainers programmes in Europe since 2011 and the handbook produced as an output of the Circus as Intercultural Encounter (CIE) project 2022, which sought to develop the intercultural competences of circus trainers and organisations. The concluding section considers how these publications reveal some pitfalls in the developing discourse on ysc but mostly offer a model of social well-being wary of and resistant to neoliberal individualism.

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