Urban geographer Irina van Aalst
鈥淭wo homes mean two distinct environments. This is the reality for many children of divorced parents. So where do they feel at home?鈥 Dr Irina van Aalst is a researcher for the theme 鈥榃here do I belong?鈥 of Dynamics of Youth. As an urban geographer, she accounts for the geographical, spatial aspect.
The study 鈥榃here do I belong?鈥 looks at children with divorced parents who grow up in two different homes. Which factors affect the question of where they feel at home? Does a divorce have less of an impact if the parents live near each other?
Football team
For example, if children live too far away from their football club every other week due to a divorce, missing every second match may mean that they can no longer perform well on the team. Sports clubs, but also municipalities and neighbourhood organisations that work with children, are very much interested in such effects of living at a considerable distance, says Van Aalst.
Experiential experts think along with the researchers.
Temporary accommodation
In addition, housing associations and municipalities find it important to know the distance between the two homes in which a child grows up. If this distance is at a risk of becoming very substantial for many children, housing associations and municipalities can decide to build or to offer temporary accommodation closer to where the other parent lives. This is already happening in Amsterdam, according to Van Aalst. As the study鈥檚 social applicability is highly relevant, the researchers collaborate with parties including the Municipality of Utrecht and youth welfare organisations. They also receive a lot of input from young people who, through Villa Pinedo, help other young people cope with divorce-related problems based on their own experience.
Young people use the city as their place to grow up.
The child鈥檚 perspective
Says Van Aalst: 鈥淭he child鈥檚 or adolescent鈥檚 perspective is always key to my research. When studying the nightlife of 16- to 25-year-olds, I was captivated by the ways young people make use of the city. They use the city as their environment in which to grow up.鈥 Next, she expanded her interest to include younger groups. 鈥榃here do I belong?鈥 involves children aged 12 to 18.
Solutions by children
At Dynamics of Youth, the researchers are taking an innovative approach in another way as well. 鈥淚n many studies of young people, children are the informants: they provide information about their situation. At Dynamics of Youth, we also want to make use of solutions suggested by children for the social issues we study. For example, together with ConsultingKids, we asked pupils from the two highest years of primary school why children spend less and less time playing outdoors. We want to incorporate their solutions into scientific studies. So far, this has not been done often in the academic world.鈥
The researchers will follow 250 separate families throughout the Netherlands.
250 families
The researchers will be monitoring 250 divorced families living across the Netherlands. This research team have made an appeal to parents and children to participate. Families in which at least one parent and one child participate fill in a questionnaire at the outset, then twice more at nine-month intervals. The children are also interviewed by Van Aalst and her colleagues in the fields of social and behavioural sciences, law, linguistics as well as computer science. In this way, the researchers hope to gain more insight into the issues that children face following a divorce. 鈥淐hildren of divorced parents become small city nomads: they constantly travel up and down with their belongings.鈥
Perspectives
Studies that seek to learn how children feel at home are greatly helped by knowledge from a variety of perspectives. Social geographers are used to collaborating across disciplines, says Van Aalst. 鈥淲e always look at the spatial aspect, but also at how a situation or an environment intrinsically affects people, in this case children. Combining perspectives in this way gives us the most complete profile of a child possible. By bringing together various research methods and disciplines, we generate more knowledge as well.鈥
Dr Irina van Aalst is an urban geographer at Utrecht 木瓜福利影视's Faculty of Geosciences. She conducts research where urban, economic and cultural geography meet. Dr Van Aalst publishes on the subjects of urban dynamics and culture, public spaces, youth, the creative industry, nightlife and the City of New York.
Research theme Dynamics of Youth
If you want to tackle social problems, you can best start with children. The Utrecht research theme Dynamics of Youth invests in a resilient youth. Scientists from all disciplines work together to better understand children's development. How do we help children and young people grow and prosper in our rapidly changing society?