Abstract

This paper explores what anticipated futures of disadvantaged urban youth can reveal about the contemporary and future consequences of austerity. As austerity has disrupted several transitions associated with adulthood, such as finding work and moving out of the parental home, it affects how young adults imagine their future. Young adults living in neighbourhoods of concentrated deprivation were particularly vulnerable to such disruptions. Therefore, this paper builds on semi-structured interviews with youth from Knocknaheeny (Cork) and Ballymun (Dublin) in Ireland to present two vignettes reflecting dominant narratives on anticipated futures. First, a narrative that embraces neoliberal logic, where young adulthood is the basis for future success through dedicated hard work rather than a phase of exploration of possible futures. Second, a narrative of “acceptance” where youth imagines the future to “go on” from the present and becomes a source of anxiety or resignation. This paper shows that combining vignettes with interview data presents two benefits. First, they illuminate the complex and sometimes contradictory stories of youth making sense of their present, past and future. Second, comparing and contrasting the vignettes to multiple participant stories can disentangle roles of location, class, gender and other differentiations. In conclusion, the paper stresses the importance of imagined futures for understanding everyday geographies of austerity as anticipated futures surface in everyday practices, behaviour, and attitudes.

Highlights

  • A generation of young people was transitioning into adulthood when the 2008 financial crisis crashed the Irish economy

  • Moving into independent housing was constrained by rapidly rising rents and social housing disinvestment (Byrne and Norris, 2018; van Lanen, 2020b)

  • This paper draws on interview data gathered for a larger project on the experiences of austerity by young adults from the neighbourhoods Ballymun (Dublin) and Knocknaheeny (Cork) in Ireland

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Summary

Introduction

A generation of young people was transitioning into adulthood when the 2008 financial crisis crashed the Irish economy. Moving into independent housing was constrained by rapidly rising rents and social housing disinvestment (Byrne and Norris, 2018; van Lanen, 2020b). These immediate and long-term impacts of crisis, recession and austerity have severe impacts on the future of young people (van Lanen, 2021; Verick, 2009). As youth carries most of the crisis-related economic stress (Whelan and Maitre, 2014), young people from low-income households often perceived the future with pessimism (Carney et al, 2014). As austerity creates new barriers and opportunities in employment, adult responsibilities, housing, and starting a family, it informs youth’s contemporary behaviour and strategies to achieve their desired or anticipated future

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