SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION AND IDENTITY FORMATION OF ‘STREET CHILDREN’ IN THE MALAYSIAN CONTEXT

Children’s issues in particular related to “street children”, is under-researched; therefore, thorough fundamental research is undertaken to provide constructive feedback in dealing effectively and holistically. An explanatory research design using a qualitative approach was used in this study. This...

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Published in:Journal of Engineering Science and Technology
Main Author: Ahmad Y.; Hamid S.N.F.A.; Tahir N.S.; Ahmad J.; Aziz N.A.; Mustapha S.Z.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor's University 2022
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85149813690&partnerID=40&md5=4a7f062fa3ab268fdf3422fe8194d3b4
id 2-s2.0-85149813690
spelling 2-s2.0-85149813690
Ahmad Y.; Hamid S.N.F.A.; Tahir N.S.; Ahmad J.; Aziz N.A.; Mustapha S.Z.
SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION AND IDENTITY FORMATION OF ‘STREET CHILDREN’ IN THE MALAYSIAN CONTEXT
2022
Journal of Engineering Science and Technology
17


https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85149813690&partnerID=40&md5=4a7f062fa3ab268fdf3422fe8194d3b4
Children’s issues in particular related to “street children”, is under-researched; therefore, thorough fundamental research is undertaken to provide constructive feedback in dealing effectively and holistically. An explanatory research design using a qualitative approach was used in this study. This study gathered data from 54 street children in five states in Malaysia (Kuala Lumpur; Kota Kinabalu, Sabah; Penang; Johor Bahru; and Sarawak); and 14 key persons representing relevant government agencies that deal with street children issue in Malaysia. The sociological research undertaken in this study discovered several significant findings. The main factor contributing to street children is poverty; followed by social problems, parents’ attitude, working, parents who migrated from outside countries (external migration, school drop-outs, peer influence, unable to go to school, at-risk as street children, parents or self-migration (internal migration), family problems, bullying, runaway cases, undocumented, ex-prisoners, chronic diseases, and orphans. A new proposed definition of street children is developed based on the key findings. Finally, this study revealed a different social pattern of street children in the Malaysian context. This calls for more attention from various parties particularly government agencies which deal with street children in the country. © School of Engineering, Taylor’s University.
Taylor's University
18234690
English
Article

author Ahmad Y.; Hamid S.N.F.A.; Tahir N.S.; Ahmad J.; Aziz N.A.; Mustapha S.Z.
spellingShingle Ahmad Y.; Hamid S.N.F.A.; Tahir N.S.; Ahmad J.; Aziz N.A.; Mustapha S.Z.
SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION AND IDENTITY FORMATION OF ‘STREET CHILDREN’ IN THE MALAYSIAN CONTEXT
author_facet Ahmad Y.; Hamid S.N.F.A.; Tahir N.S.; Ahmad J.; Aziz N.A.; Mustapha S.Z.
author_sort Ahmad Y.; Hamid S.N.F.A.; Tahir N.S.; Ahmad J.; Aziz N.A.; Mustapha S.Z.
title SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION AND IDENTITY FORMATION OF ‘STREET CHILDREN’ IN THE MALAYSIAN CONTEXT
title_short SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION AND IDENTITY FORMATION OF ‘STREET CHILDREN’ IN THE MALAYSIAN CONTEXT
title_full SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION AND IDENTITY FORMATION OF ‘STREET CHILDREN’ IN THE MALAYSIAN CONTEXT
title_fullStr SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION AND IDENTITY FORMATION OF ‘STREET CHILDREN’ IN THE MALAYSIAN CONTEXT
title_full_unstemmed SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION AND IDENTITY FORMATION OF ‘STREET CHILDREN’ IN THE MALAYSIAN CONTEXT
title_sort SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION AND IDENTITY FORMATION OF ‘STREET CHILDREN’ IN THE MALAYSIAN CONTEXT
publishDate 2022
container_title Journal of Engineering Science and Technology
container_volume 17
container_issue
doi_str_mv
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85149813690&partnerID=40&md5=4a7f062fa3ab268fdf3422fe8194d3b4
description Children’s issues in particular related to “street children”, is under-researched; therefore, thorough fundamental research is undertaken to provide constructive feedback in dealing effectively and holistically. An explanatory research design using a qualitative approach was used in this study. This study gathered data from 54 street children in five states in Malaysia (Kuala Lumpur; Kota Kinabalu, Sabah; Penang; Johor Bahru; and Sarawak); and 14 key persons representing relevant government agencies that deal with street children issue in Malaysia. The sociological research undertaken in this study discovered several significant findings. The main factor contributing to street children is poverty; followed by social problems, parents’ attitude, working, parents who migrated from outside countries (external migration, school drop-outs, peer influence, unable to go to school, at-risk as street children, parents or self-migration (internal migration), family problems, bullying, runaway cases, undocumented, ex-prisoners, chronic diseases, and orphans. A new proposed definition of street children is developed based on the key findings. Finally, this study revealed a different social pattern of street children in the Malaysian context. This calls for more attention from various parties particularly government agencies which deal with street children in the country. © School of Engineering, Taylor’s University.
publisher Taylor's University
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language English
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