Up the Youth Club: Illuminating a Hidden History
By (Author) Emma Warren
Faber & Faber
Faber & Faber
2nd December 2025
11th September 2025
Main
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Politics and government
The Arts
305.230942
Hardback
448
Width 135mm, Height 216mm
'Youth clubs have always existed. They always will, because there will always be young people. How we care for our youth, and what we owe them, is a question for all of us.'
In Up the Youth Club, Emma Warren maps the shifting story of youth clubs in the UK and Northern Ireland, from factory workers in Victorian Boys' and Girls' clubs to renegade self-emancipatory spaces in the 1970s and the music-generating youth clubs of more recent decades. With a mixed lineage in church evangelism, the patronage of the upper classes, grassroots' DIY, and erratic state funding, the youth club has had a huge, yet almost invisible, effect on music, sport, culture and society.
Arguing that we cannot advocate for what we do not understand, Warren positions youth clubs as a kind of engine room - from the famous success stories to come out of their doors, such as The Specials or Stormzy, to the untold stories of young people finding shelter, sustenance and stimulation for centuries - and why their dwindling numbers, largely due to austerity and funding cuts, is of serious concern for us all.
With this impassioned history, Warren invites us to pick up the torch and play an active part in protecting and re-igniting this vital part of UK society.
Emma Warren has been documenting grassroots music culture for decades. She is the author of Make Some Space (2019), which was a MOJO book of the year and was re-released by Chicago record label International Anthem; her pamphlet Steam Down (2019), which was published by Rough Trade Books and named an Irish Times read of the year; Document Your Culture (2020); and Dance Your Way Home (2023), which was a Guardian book of the year and Sunday Times book of the week.
Warren was a founding contributor to Jockey Slut magazine, worked on staff at The Face and worked as the editorial mentor at youth-run Brixton publication Live Magazine. Her monthly radio show on Worldwide FM ran for six years.