Eleutheromania
Frantic zeal for freedom
Eleutheromania, or eleutherophilia is "a mania or frantic zeal for freedom".[1] Some usages of the term make it sound like it could be used in a medical context with a hint of an irrational disorder, such as John G Robertson's definition that described it as a mad zeal or irresistible craving for freedom.[2] However other usages assign to the term normal human emotional responses such as a mere passion for liberty.[3] Individuals with this condition are called eleutheromaniacs.[4] An antonym for the term is eleutherophobia. An individual that fears freedom is an eleutherophobe.[2]
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Youth empowerment
- Evolving capacities
- Free-range parenting
- Future generations
- Intergenerational equity
- Leaving the nest
- Student voice
- Youth-adult partnership
- Youth mainstreaming
- Youth rights
- Youth voice
- Anarchistic free school
- Community youth development
- Democratic education
- Popular education
- Positive youth development
- Student activism
- Student-centered learning
- Student rights
- Teen court
- Youth activism
- Youth council
- Youth engagement
- Youth leadership
- Youth-led media
- Youth organizations
- Youth participation
- Youth philanthropy
- Youth politics
- Youth service
- Youth suffrage
- Youth vote
- Youth work
- Adultcentrism
- Adultism
- Age restrictions
- Ageism
- Control freak
- Eleutherophobia
- Ephebiphobia
- Fear of children
- Gerontocracy
- Grounding
- Helicopter parent
- Infantilization
- Intrusiveness
- Narcissism
- Parental respect
- Paternalism
- Patriarchy
- School-to-prison pipeline
- Vicariousness
- Youth control complex
- Youth exclusion
- Age of candidacy
- Age of consent reform
- Age of criminal responsibility
- Beat Generation
- Beatnik
- The Catcher in the Rye
- Counterculture of the 1960s
- Greaser
- Hippies
- Hungry generation
- International Youth Year
- LGBT student movement
- Subcultures of the 1950s
- Taking Children Seriously
- The Teenage Liberation Handbook
- Teenage rebellion
- UK underground
- Voting age
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