Positive deviance in youth work
How positive deviance can inform youth work without replacing relationships, safeguarding, inclusion or structural analysis.
This guide is practical and source-led. It is designed to help people ask better questions, not to make unsupported promises.
Why it fits youth work
Youth work already pays attention to agency, informal learning, relationships and context. Positive deviance adds a disciplined way to notice uncommon constructive practice that is already happening.
A careful practice sequence
- define the issue with young people and practitioners
- look for uncommon positive outcomes within similar constraints
- study behaviours and conditions, not personalities alone
- test small adaptations with consent and reflection
- share learning without overclaiming impact
Safeguarding and ethics
Positive deviance work should never ask young people to expose trauma, perform resilience or take responsibility for fixing systems alone. Adult support, boundaries and consent matter throughout.