Fragmenting the Family? The Complexity of Household Migration Strategies in Post-apartheid South Africa

K. Hall, D. Posel
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引用次数: 29

Abstract

Abstract The disruption of family life is one of the important legacies of South Africa’s colonial and apartheid history. Families were undermined by deliberate strategies implemented through the pass laws, forced removals, urban housing policy, and the creation of homelands. Despite the removal of legal restrictions on permanent urban settlement and family co-residence for Africans, patterns of internal and oscillating labor migration have endured, dual or stretched households continue to link urban and rural nodes, children have remained less urbanized than adults, and many grow up without coresident parents. Although children are clearly affected by adult labor migration, they have tended to be ignored in the migration discourse. In this study, we add to the literature by showing how a child lens advances our understanding of the complexities of household arrangements and migration processes for families. In a mixed-methods study, we use nationally representative panel data to describe persistence, and also change, in migration patterns in South Africa when viewed from the perspective of children. We then draw on a detailed case study to explore what factors constrain or permit families to migrate together, or children to join adults at migration destination areas.
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分裂家庭?种族隔离后南非家庭移民策略的复杂性
家庭生活的破裂是南非殖民和种族隔离历史的重要遗产之一。通过通行证法、强制搬迁、城市住房政策和建立家园实施的蓄意战略破坏了家庭。尽管取消了对非洲人永久城市定居和家庭共同居住的法律限制,但内部和振荡的劳动力迁移模式仍然存在,双重或紧张的家庭继续连接城市和农村节点,儿童的城市化程度仍然低于成年人,许多人在没有共同父母的情况下长大。尽管儿童明显受到成年劳动力移民的影响,但在移民话语中,他们往往被忽视。在这项研究中,我们通过展示儿童视角如何促进我们对家庭安排和移民过程复杂性的理解,为文献增添了内容。在一项混合方法研究中,我们使用具有全国代表性的小组数据来描述从儿童的角度来看南非移民模式的持续性和变化。然后,我们利用一个详细的案例研究来探索哪些因素限制或允许家庭一起移民,或者儿童在移民目的地与成年人团聚。
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来源期刊
IZA Journal of Development and Migration
IZA Journal of Development and Migration Social Sciences-Anthropology
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
审稿时长
10 weeks
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