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        <rdf:li rdf:resource="https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/29191" />
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    <dc:date>2026-04-27T13:32:56Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/29191">
    <title>Generational differences and cultural change</title>
    <link>https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/29191</link>
    <description>Title: Generational differences and cultural change
Abstract: Young people are arguably facing complex life situations in their transition&#xD;
into adulthood and navigating their life trajectories in a highly individualised&#xD;
way. For youth in post-compulsory education, their training years have been&#xD;
extended, their years of dependency have increased and they have greater&#xD;
individual choice compared to previous youth generations. This study&#xD;
develops an understanding of the process of individualisation applied to&#xD;
youth in late modernity and explores it in relation to the neo-liberal climate. It&#xD;
compares the life situation of this youth generation with youth in the early&#xD;
1960s, brought up with more predefined traditional conditions, cemented in&#xD;
traditional social structures. The processes that led to generational changes&#xD;
in the experiences of youth in the last forty-five years are examined, linked to&#xD;
structural transformations that influence subjective experiences. Specifically,&#xD;
the shifts of the conditions of youth in post-compulsory education are studied&#xD;
in relations to socio-economic, technological and cultural changes. This study discusses the Western Anglo-American model of changes in youth’s life experiences and examines how it (mis)fits in a more conservative Catholic Mediterranean setting. The research investigates conditions in Malta, an ex-colonial small island Mediterranean state, whose peculiarities include its delayed economic development compared to the Western setting.&#xD;
The core of the research comprises of primary data collection using in-depth,&#xD;
ethnographical interviews, with two generations of youth in different sociohistorical&#xD;
context; those who experienced their youth in the early 1960s’ and&#xD;
youth in the late 2000s. This study concludes that the concept of individualisation does indeed illuminate the experiences of youth in late modernity especially when&#xD;
compared to the experiences of youth forty-five years ago. However the&#xD;
concept of individualisation is applied in a glocalised manner in line with the&#xD;
peculiarities of Malta that has lagged behind mainstream developments in&#xD;
Western Europe and still retained traditional features. Building on the&#xD;
individualisation concept, I use an empirically grounded concept of &#xD;
‘compromised choices’ to describe the increase in the bargaining of choice&#xD;
happening at different fronts in the life experiences of youth, especially in the&#xD;
life biography of women, choices in education and the job market and&#xD;
choices in consumption.</description>
    <dc:date>2012-12-17T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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