Att bli någon bland andra: Barns tillhörighetsprocesser i förskolans diskursiva praktiker
Karin Rang Larsson har i sin avhandling undersökt hur barn skapar, respektive utesluts från att skapa, tillhörighet genom lärares, barns och vårdnadshavares tal och handlingar i förskolans vardagspraktik.
Karin Rang Larsson
Professor Ninni Wahlström, Linnéuniversitetet
Professor Johannes Westberg, University of Groningen, Nederländerna
Linnéuniversitetet
2026-06-12
Institutionen för pedagogik
Abstrakt
This dissertation examines children’s social belonging in Swedish preschool. It identifies the social and ethical values that emerge as children strive to experience a sense of belonging and feeling at home within preschool communities. Drawing on the theoretical framework of the politics of belonging (Yuval-Davis, 2006, 2011) and informed by critical discourse analysis (Fairclough, 2010), this study conceptualises belonging as a relational and power-laden process constituted through everyday interactions. The empirical material for this research consists of interviews, video observations, and field notes collected from two preschool settings. By analysing the talk and actions of teachers, children, and guardians, the study explores how belonging is constructed, negotiated, and contested in everyday practices. Attention is devoted to processes of inclusion and exclusion as well as to how identities and social positions are produced in preschool as a discursive practice. The findings reveal that belonging is shaped by a dynamic interplay between individual agency and institutional norms. Being part of preschool therefore implies not only physical presence but also active engagement in play, routines, and activities. Through such engagement, children participate in the construction of meaning through place and in doing so, also create themselves as individuals who belong. At the same time, the analysis shows that belonging is not equally accessible to all; it is influenced by factors such as social norms, language, cultural background and social competence. Children’s belonging is shaped through the interplay between three overarching levels of categorisation: translocality, transcality, and transtemporality. Together, they constitute a politics of belonging that influences children’s opportunities for participation, recognition, and inclusion in everyday preschool life. This politics reflects a broader tension between conceptualisations of children. In summary, belonging is shaped by complex politics in which children are expected to both act independently, require support and to be active co-constructors of their social worlds while also being recipients of care. These conflicting expectations are not merely pedagogical challenges but expressions of deeper normative structures that shape the conditions under which children are able to belong in preschool.