Youth Insight

Putting young people at the centre of research
Youth Insight provides a pathway to young and emerging researchers, offering them the opportunity to develop their skills and lead/undertake rigorous research projects that turn experience into insight, and insight into impact. 

 

The Coram Institute for Children is the only think tank dedicated to the future of children, working with partners and young people to learn from the past, examine current needs and create better chances for the next generation. Youth Insight forms part of the Institute, providing a pathway for graduates to produce high-quality research informed by their experience and expertise.

 

 

About Youth Insight

The driving intention of this programme is to turn youth experience into rigorous insight, produced without being framed by the research design and analysis of others.

Integrated into the resources, structures, and audiences of Coram, each researcher will lead an independent research project which culminates in a published report. A Youth Insight Forum will also be held to disseminate and explore their work with wider audiences. See our recent projects and events below. Each placement offers an opportunity for young people to develop existing research skills, build collaboration and leadership, and contribute perspectives that will support the expansion of the Coram Institute for Children.

As an ongoing cycle of researchers, Youth Insight will ensure the Institute stays at the forefront of youth issues, constantly informed by fresh perspectives and lived experience. Structured at the heart of the Institute, these insights will be translated into real and tangible impact and set agendas for the future work of Coram’s researchers.

The development of Youth Insight is being led by Anthony Lynch, Zoe Lambert and Milly Jonas (pictured).

"Young people should be not just informing and participants in research, but driving the agenda and building their future careers... We need to help young people today to develop their career pathways in order to help us to develop the research language and methodologies that are really going to be needed to address the issues of the future."
Dr Carol Homden
Coram CEO

Youth Insight research projects

You can view past and upcoming research projects from the team by using the dropdowns below.

 

 

Complex Identity | Anthony Lynch and Zoe Lambert | 2023-4

Bios

Anthony Lynch is a researcher and mixed-heritage adoptee working in the intersection between Lived Experience and Policy. Their work in identity began when they co-founded In-Between Lines, an award-winning exhibition for individuals belonging to multiple ethnicities, cultures, and families. They are also a steering group member for an upcoming parliamentary inquiry into adoptee voices, organised by the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Adoption and Permanence.

Zoe Lambert is a transracial adoptee, born in Cambodia but raised in Singapore with a British passport. Attending an international school meant that she was constantly surrounded by a rich tapestry of cultures, ideas and traditions. Her diverse upbringing has shaped her understanding of complex identities and as a result, Zoe is passionate about contributing valuable insight to the discourse on complex identities, driven by her desire to help people understand themselves and others better.

Complex Identity papers

Complex Identity: An Intersectional Framework for Youth Organisations and Researchers in the UK | Anthony Lynch

This intersectional research paper highlights the lived experience of individuals with multiple identities in a single social category. Traditional conceptions of identity have an understanding of one identity per social category e.g.: British → Nationality, which does not address the need of several marginalised groups. Situated in the UK equality and peer research context, the paper explores academic and grassroots accounts in transracial care experience, mixed-heritage, Third Culture Kid, and border communities. Introducing the Complex Identity framework, it relates these experiences to encourage political networks and connections across differences. Neither exhaustive nor authoritative, it aims to ‘speak nearby’ these communities, creating space for others to detail their lived experience. The motivation behind the research is the increasingly globalised world that young people inhabit. The UK is the most ethnically diverse it has ever been, and with residential segregation between demographics decreasing, young people are living in a fusion of cultures, foods, traditions, music, families, languages, and friends. These factors are producing a consciousness of identity complexity for these groups that organisations and researchers need to account for in their work. The paper gives several recommendations for researchers and organisations to raise awareness of complex identities, as well as to increase representation and funding for grassroots groups. By accurately conceptualising the needs of marginalised young people, the hope is that support for identity can reflect the complex reality of 21st century Britain.

Beyond Labels: Understanding the Complex Identities of Youth in the UK | Zoe Lambert

This report examines the social and psychological development of complex identities in adolescents within the United Kingdom, aimed at informing people in positions of authority. By integrating Erikson’s identity development theory from “Childhood and Society” (1993) with additional theories related to the complex identity experience, this study provides a comprehensive analysis of the unique challenges faced by these adolescents. The findings reveal that adolescents with complex identities must navigate several distinct processes to achieve the optimal outcome described in Erikson’s theory. These processes add to the typical developmental tasks that adolescents face as they transition to adulthood. The report also considers the significant roles of globalisation and the internet in shaping complex identities, influencing both the development process and its pace. This complexity indicates that the current infrastructure is not equipped to address the nuances of complex identities, as evidenced by a lack of existing research and unanswered questions in official reports. To prevent policy errors and social division, it is recommended that professional bodies and authorities educate themselves on the phenomenon of complex identities. A lived experience-focused approach and a better understanding of the implications of having a complex identity will help create knowledge in this area.

Complex Identity event

These papers were discussed at a Youth Forum held on 2 July 2024 at Coram Campus. Entitled Embracing Complexity: Identity in Research, Policy, and Lived Experience, this event aimed to bring together practitioners, researchers, and others involved in the children’s sector to consider how complex identity can be incorporated into the work of organisations. You can view a recording of the event below. Information on speakers and schedule are available on the event page.

Feedback from speakers

 

 

“What the reports have done for me is show how much academic researchers miss if they haven’t actually had the experience of what they’re researching, so I really think they add insight and new dimensions to research. I think their work has the potential to radically change the way researchers look at identity..."
Susan Golombok
Professor Emerita of Family Research and former Director of the Centre for Family Research at the University of Cambridge
“I thought the research papers were really thought provoking and stimulated a lot of conversation… From a practice and policy perspective they really made me think about how we can incorporate a better understanding of complex identities in the work that we do in terms of delivering services for children and their families.”
John Anthony
Operational Director Children & Families, London Borough of Redbridge
“The papers are really thorough, they bring lots of new insights. I think that this issue is going to be increasingly relevant to the younger generations that are coming up now.”
Hardeep Matharu
Editor of Byline Times
'It's really fantastic... I would love to use it for students. I'll be looking to use both of your concepts for research, and I think we need to be asking practitioners to be using your work for practice.”
Dr Tam Cane
Senior Lecturer in Social Work and Social Care at the University of Sussex