Coastal youth: exploring the impact of coastal towns on young people's life chances
Lead Research Organisation:
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON
Department Name: Education, Practice & Society
Abstract
This project examines the ways in which growing up in a coastal town can impact on young people's life chances; that is, their likelihood of having good outcomes in adulthood in terms of education, work, housing, and health and wellbeing. We focus on coastal towns as some of the most deprived neighbourhoods in the UK are now in coastal areas. Coastal towns have attracted a lot of attention in recent UK policy debates, and these discussions often raise concerns about the future of young people in these towns, largely because of the limited educational and employment opportunities. Despite this, there is very little research on the impact of growing up in a coastal town on young people's experiences, attitudes, or life chances. This project will address this gap by answering four key questions:
1. (a) Does growing up in coastal towns, compared to similarly deprived areas in England and Wales, impact on the life chances of young people? (b) Do these inequalities in life chances persist over the life course or narrow in later age?
2. What are the environmental mechanisms linking growing up in a coastal town to adverse life chances in adulthood?
3. What personal attributes or experiences can help mitigate the initial drawback of growing up in a coastal town (e.g. parental support, residential mobility, or aspiration)?
4. What interventions could improve the life chances of young people in coastal communities, based (a) on the results of quasi-experimental quantitative methods and (b) on coastal residents' own views?
We will address these questions using a combination of quantitative and qualitative data. The quantitative analysis draws on longitudinal survey data from three different generations that allow us to compare the outcomes of adolescents from the 1970s, the 1980s and the 2000s. These cohort studies enable us to consider: change over the life course (as respondents grow up and move into later adulthood); change over time (inter-generational differences); and changes in geography (intra-generational differences between coastal and non-coastal youth). We can also use these data to test potential policy solutions by applying quasi-experimental quantitative methods.
The project also includes a qualitative strand that will produce original data with current residents of coastal towns. In 6 coastal towns in England and Wales we will talk to younger and older residents about their experiences of growing up in coastal towns and their views about the opportunities and aspirations for young people in the town. Residents will also be asked for their views of what their town needs to do to improve the life chances of young people. Part of this strand will be completed using co-production methods that involve recruiting, training, and supporting young people to become Young Researchers in their community. We will also use arts-and place-based methods such as postcard-making, walking interviews and life maps. Change over time will be futher examined by comparing youth aspirations from today with those compiled in the NCDS 1969 archive of student essays.
The findings from these analyses will bring new insights to academic debates as well as new policy proposals for public discussions about place-based disparities in health, wellbeing, employment, and education. Our findings will thus contribute to recent discussions about Levelling Up and addressing regional inequalities (HM Govt, 2022) as well as longer-standing discussions about equal opportunities to life chances (Field, 2010) and health inequalities (CMO, 2021). While various reports have identified the areas of concern, few advanced analyses or youth-focused solutions have been offered, and we expect that this project can contribute to filling these gaps. Local policymakers and practitioners will also benefit from a deeper understanding of how their younger and older residents view their town currently, and how they wish their town to develop in the future.
1. (a) Does growing up in coastal towns, compared to similarly deprived areas in England and Wales, impact on the life chances of young people? (b) Do these inequalities in life chances persist over the life course or narrow in later age?
2. What are the environmental mechanisms linking growing up in a coastal town to adverse life chances in adulthood?
3. What personal attributes or experiences can help mitigate the initial drawback of growing up in a coastal town (e.g. parental support, residential mobility, or aspiration)?
4. What interventions could improve the life chances of young people in coastal communities, based (a) on the results of quasi-experimental quantitative methods and (b) on coastal residents' own views?
We will address these questions using a combination of quantitative and qualitative data. The quantitative analysis draws on longitudinal survey data from three different generations that allow us to compare the outcomes of adolescents from the 1970s, the 1980s and the 2000s. These cohort studies enable us to consider: change over the life course (as respondents grow up and move into later adulthood); change over time (inter-generational differences); and changes in geography (intra-generational differences between coastal and non-coastal youth). We can also use these data to test potential policy solutions by applying quasi-experimental quantitative methods.
The project also includes a qualitative strand that will produce original data with current residents of coastal towns. In 6 coastal towns in England and Wales we will talk to younger and older residents about their experiences of growing up in coastal towns and their views about the opportunities and aspirations for young people in the town. Residents will also be asked for their views of what their town needs to do to improve the life chances of young people. Part of this strand will be completed using co-production methods that involve recruiting, training, and supporting young people to become Young Researchers in their community. We will also use arts-and place-based methods such as postcard-making, walking interviews and life maps. Change over time will be futher examined by comparing youth aspirations from today with those compiled in the NCDS 1969 archive of student essays.
The findings from these analyses will bring new insights to academic debates as well as new policy proposals for public discussions about place-based disparities in health, wellbeing, employment, and education. Our findings will thus contribute to recent discussions about Levelling Up and addressing regional inequalities (HM Govt, 2022) as well as longer-standing discussions about equal opportunities to life chances (Field, 2010) and health inequalities (CMO, 2021). While various reports have identified the areas of concern, few advanced analyses or youth-focused solutions have been offered, and we expect that this project can contribute to filling these gaps. Local policymakers and practitioners will also benefit from a deeper understanding of how their younger and older residents view their town currently, and how they wish their town to develop in the future.
Organisations
Publications
Keating A
(2024)
Movers, returners and stayers: the role of place in shaping the (im)mobility aspirations of young people in coastal towns
in Journal of Youth Studies
| Description | (1) Growing up in deprived coastal towns has a lasting and negative impact on mental health: Murray et al (2024) found that English adolescents who lived in the most deprived coastal neighbourhoods had worse mental health outcomes up to 11 years later than if they had lived in equivalent inland neighbourhoods. (2) Young people in coastal towns feel that they are marginalised from their town and this contributes to their desire to move elsewhere, and exacerbates the youth out-migration and demographic imbalance that many coastal towns experience (see Keating et al, 2024). |
| Exploitation Route | Future research could examine: why there is a mental health gap between deprived coastal towns and equally-deprived coastal towns? What interventions could be used to address these causes? Researchers could also examine how declines in built environment and youth services have contributed to the marginalisation of coastal youth. |
| Sectors | Communities and Social Services/Policy Education Healthcare Leisure Activities including Sports Recreation and Tourism |
| Description | Interview contribution to DCMS study on Future of Youth Services |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Policy Influence Type | Contribution to a national consultation/review |
| Description | BBC background interview for segment on The Today Programme (Radio 4), August 2022 |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Media (as a channel to the public) |
| Results and Impact | Interviewed in August 2022 by a BBC Radio 4 producer to provide background info for a segment on coastal towns for the The Today progamme. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
| Description | Meeting with Cabinet Office officials |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
| Results and Impact | We met with members of the Cabinet Office Opportunity and Missions team to discuss our research on Coastal Youth Life Chances. During the meeting we explained the aims and foci of our research, and how our findings might be beneficial to the work that they are doing in the area of equal opportunites. The Head of Opportunity Mission, OEO, invited us to meet with them after they head our presentation at the Journal of Youth Studies conference, after we presented our findings about youth employment and place attitudes in Barrow-in-Furness. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| Description | Presentation of Findings at the 2025 Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government Science Seminar Series |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
| Results and Impact | We were invited by the MHCLG Chief Scientific Adviser's Office to present our findings at the first seminar in the 2025 Science Seminar Series. The theme that we chose to focus on was "Good jobs are not enough: Why job creation alone cannot solve place-based inequalities." Successive governments have emphasised job creation for local economic growth, often assuming wider social benefits. For this seminar, we aimed to counter this assumption, advocating investment in social, community and transport infrastructure. Our paper drew on qualitative data generated with young people in Barrow-in-Furness, an industrial coastal town with a local employer (BAE systems) that has abundant "good" job opportunities. While some of the young people welcomed the security that these opportunities offered, the majority wanted to move away from Barrow, even if it was not in their economic interest to do so. We argue that the lack of leisure and community spaces, particularly for young adults, plays a key role in this and highlights why job creation policies need to be coupled with efforts to re-build leisure and civic spaces for local communities. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2025 |
| Description | Presentation to Widening Participation practitioners, NERUPI |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | Invited by NERUPI to present research findings on "Mobility aspirations and the role of HE" to WP pratcitioners from around the country. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
| URL | https://www.nerupi.co.uk/events/the-influence-of-geographical-location-on-participation-in-higher-ed... |
