List of Illustrations Acknowledgements Introduction 1. Voting over History 2. Competence 3. Knowledge 4. Power 5. Outcomes for Children 6. Outcomes for Societies 7. The Proxy-Claim Vote Manifesto References Index
A comprehensive argument for why suffrage should be universal, regardless of age.
John Wall is Professor of Philosophy, Religion, and Childhood Studies, and Director of the Childism Institute, at Rutgers University, USA. His publications include Children's Rights (2016), Ethics in Light of Childhood (2010), and Moral Creativity (2005).
[T]he book is written in such a way that it makes it easy for
readers to weigh up the various proposals for children's right to
vote and to come to their own judgment. It is also a creative
contribution to counteract the still prevalent adultism in today's
societies.
*socialnet (Bloomsbury translation)*
Future generations will ponder why children were for so long denied
the right to have their views represented at the ballot box, just
as we wonder why societies argued against the right of women and
people of colour to vote. Professor John Wall has written a
scholarly work that is also a gripping read.
*Neena Modi, Professor of Neonatal Medicine, Imperial College
London, UK*
Is it time to give children the vote? In a nuanced, deeply thought
and challenging way, this book combines political theory and
childhood studies and demonstrates why the constraining of suffrage
rights according to age can be profoundly problematic. It undercuts
simplistic comprehensions about adult voting rights, competence,
knowledge and how age structure power relations. John Wall extends
the argument to a claim for proxy voting for all children. It
contains both a vision of how proxy voting can help to redeem
deteriorating democratic values and an insightful and novel social
critique. This book will stimulate new thinking in a wide range of
areas and deserves a broad audience among academic scholars,
politicians, activists for extension of voting rights – simply
anyone interested in the future of our democracies.
*Bengt Sandin, Professor Emeritus of Child Studies, Linköping
University, Sweden*
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