EU
  
You are currently viewing the European Union version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
26 MIN READ TIME

Inside Out

My own life experiences are what led me to be a Youth Worker. I was an early school leaver, there’s addiction in my family, I come from a disadvantaged neighbourhood where opportunities aren’t great; life outcomes aren’t as linear as the rest of society. What emerged out of that was the realisation that we can continue to get educated, so I went back to school. While I was studying in Maynooth, training to be a youth and community worker, my lecturers said, ‘we want to see what you’re like with issue-based work’. So, I came to BeLonG To.

Photo by Babs Daly.

When I arrived at BeLonG To I was just blown away. The approach to youth work here is more about critical thinking. Youth work traditionally focuses on personal development of young people; it’s about intervening and giving them skills to fit into a society tailor-made for them already. Our approach is more like: hang on, there are certain issues in this society, so let’s engage young people to question that society. Let’s give them the skills and the capacity to go out and become agents of social change.

Read the complete article and many more in this issue of GCN
Purchase options below
If you own the issue, Login to read the full article now.
Single Digital Issue 333
 
FREE
BUY NOW
This issue and other back issues are not included in a new subscription. Subscriptions include the latest regular issue and new issues released during your subscription. GCN

This article is from...


View Issues
GCN
333
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


Editor’s Letter
From The Youth Editor
Hi my name is Emer and I was lucky enough
We Asked Some Of Our Gorgeous Contributors...
What advice would you give to your 18 year-old self? Last year, Robyn wrote a piece for GCN that kick-started
Focál Up
The NI Same Sex Marriage Court Case
Earlier this year, we here in the Republic celebrated two years since the passing of 2015’s marriage referendum. Meanwhile, mere miles away, our LGBT+ neighbours to the north have not been so lucky.
Farewell Orphan Black
The sci-fi drama came to a climatic end this month,
Night Vale Fever
We’re very excited about the brand new Dublin Podcast Festival,
Talking Bi+
This month we’re on the road with GCN Town Hall
Frockin’ All Over The World
Not only do the Spain-based couple own the gorgeously flamboyant
The Moonlight Efect
With Moonlight having won Best Film at this year’s Academy
Prick Up Your Queers
As part of the 50th anniversary of the 1967 Sexual
True Wildeblood
Not a lot of people know this, but the key
Food for Thought with Beverly Swift, MD of Nando’s Ireland
Beverly is the MD for nine Nando’s restaurants in Ireland
Made ‘n’ Shade
Adult film company xHamster has offered to step in and
Queer View Mirror
Even before the gay rights lobbying organisation GLEN made the
The Book Guy
It’s our youth issue, so Stephen Boylan is all about the YA titles this month
Feature: Music
Modern Anthem 002 Charting The Songs We Love So Well
In 1998 Whitney Houston came back with a brand new dance-club album, but it wasn’t until the Thunderpuss remix of ‘It’s Not Right, But It’s Okay’ that she went stellar again. It would become the enduring queer anthem of an icon who was possibly queer herself
Interview
Baby, Remember My Name
Although he’s become a darling of the London scene with his cabaret shows at alternative East End queer club, The Glory, Roscommon native Anthony Keigher, aka Xnthony, has always had his eye on a bigger prize, as his new show at the Dublin Fringe attests. As Xnthony gears up to rebrand himself as a straight for pop stardom, Keigher talks to Brian Finnegan about fame, his own Marvel Universe, fake authenticity, and the strange correlation between queerness and rural life
Opinion
The Fully-Automated Luxury Gender Oasis
An article in last September’s issue of GCN sparked a fuse that’s led to the formation of Ireland’s rst trans artist’s collective, which in turn has led to a major trans-led collaborative event at this year’s Dublin Fringe Festival. Trans Live Art Salon member, Robyn McQuaid-O’Dwyer talks about having a real impact on trans presence on the Irish stage
Budding Burning Issues Survey
Budding Burning Issues
The issues facing Ireland’s LGBT+ young people
Budding Burning Issues
What's The Matter With Sex Ed?
Huge misinformation exists amongst young people regarding HIV transmission, and it’s because of the dearth and quality of sex education in Ireland. It’s time to ACT UP in schools, says Ralph Hurley O’Dwyer
Report
The HPV Strain
For the past four months the Health Service Executive has been rolling out a vaccine to young men under 26 years of age, free of charge, against a sexually transmitted infection that can cause anal and penile cancers. But the HPV vaccine is not without its detractors, in particular a group led by mothers of young girls who they say sufered adverse reactions following mass vaccination in Irish schools. Aifric Ní Chríodáin reports on a sexual healthcare drive that’s causing bitter division
Promotional
Recent Graduate? Gay It Up In San Fran For A Year!
Get a USA 1 year Grad Visa and it just might change your life forever in the gayest city in the world
Community Chest
IndividualiTy
Meet some members of IndividualiTy, the youth group for trans and non-binary people under 24, which celebrated its 10th birthday this year
Hook-Up Apps & Mental Health
Hook-up apps have changed the nature of the gay scene, and for young people coming out on to that scene, it can be a brutalising experience
Shirley’s Burn Book
Audra DeLassio takes it up the gicker and…
Chat
X
Pocketmags Support