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Navigating transnational childcare relationships: migrant parents and their children's caregivers in the origin country
Author(s) -
POEZE MIRANDA,
DANKYI ERNESTINA K.,
MAZZUCATO VALENTINA
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
global networks
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.685
H-Index - 65
eISSN - 1471-0374
pISSN - 1470-2266
DOI - 10.1111/glob.12135
Subject(s) - kinship , ethnography , work (physics) , perception , sociology , sample (material) , domestic work , care work , gender studies , psychology , social psychology , mechanical engineering , chemistry , chromatography , neuroscience , anthropology , engineering
In this article, we investigate the daily work entailed in maintaining informal transnational childcare relationships between migrant parents and the children's kin or non‐kin caregivers in the country of origin. By applying the concept of ‘kin work’, we seek to understand how work is performed within transnational care relationships. Using a simultaneous matched sample methodology that gives equal weight to data on both sides of the transnational relationship, a team of researchers collected ethnographic data from Ghanaian migrant parents in the Netherlands and from their children's caregivers in Ghana. This approach allowed us to investigate the day‐to‐day care work from two perspectives – namely the visible and the invisible actions of the people involved in creating the kinship relationships of care work. Discrepancies in perceptions were uncovered because we compared data obtained on both sides of the relationship. These findings contribute to our understanding of the ways in which long‐distance practices facilitate the maintenance of kin relationships and how the inability to perform these can lead to tensions.