Increasingly, young people live online, with the vast majority of their
social and cultural interactions conducted through means other than
face-to-face conversation. How does this transition impact the ways in
which young migrants understand, negotiate, and perform identity? That's
the question taken up by Digital Passages: Migrant Youth 2.0, a
ground-breaking analysis of the ways that youth culture online interacts
with issues of diaspora, gender, and belonging. Drawing on surveys,
in-depth interviews, and ethnography, Koen Leurs builds an
interdisciplinary portrait of online youth culture and the spaces it
opens up for migrant youth to negotiate power relations and to promote
intercultural understanding.