Intergenerational Solidarity Revisited: Migrant Families in the Dilemma of Providing Family or Elderly Care in the Context of the Covid-19 Pandemic and its Challenges

IF 1.5 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY
Magdalena Ślusarczyk
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Abstract

The assumption that people live in one place with their lives guided by a singular set of national and cultural norms no longer holds true. The same applies for migrating due to various reasons with the aim of finding a better place to live. Instead, contemporary transnational migrants are accustomed to operating in several contexts of employment, leisure and political interests that extend beyond national borders. Yet, state borders still cut through the very core of the family life, forcing migrants to take difficult decisions about leaving, separation or arranging care of children and elderly, but also creating a certain degree of choice between two or more socio-political social and cultural contexts. Events of recent years have shaken established beliefs about the potential of transnational care networks. As the experience of the Covid-19 pandemic has shown, what once seemed to be enduring rules can be suspended for long periods of time. For Poland, one of the countries affected by intense mobility to and from the country, discussions about the effects of migration on care networks are of paramount importance. As a direct consequence of mobility, the expectations and obligations that migrants (especially women) have towards the family they leave behind may change, shift or even remain unrestricted in spite of living abroad. Yet, establishing family care strategies for elderly family members in ageing societies is also based on the assumption of availability of migrant labour. Drawing on two sets of data, this article asks how intergenerational obligations were negotiated during the Covid-19 pandemic and whether the associated long-term restrictions on crossing national borders caused changes in patterns of care provision. * This article belongs to a special issue on “Demographic Developments in Eastern and Western Europe Before and After the Transformation of Socialist Countries”.
重新审视代际团结:2019冠状病毒病大流行及其挑战背景下,面临家庭或养老困境的移民家庭
人们生活在一个地方,他们的生活受到一套单一的国家和文化规范的指导,这种假设不再成立。这同样适用于由于各种原因而移民,目的是寻找更好的居住地。相反,当代跨国移民习惯于在跨越国界的就业、休闲和政治利益等多种背景下运作。然而,国家边界仍然切断了家庭生活的核心,迫使移民在离开、分离或安排照顾孩子和老人方面做出艰难的决定,但也在一定程度上在两种或更多的社会政治、社会和文化背景之间做出选择。近年来发生的事件动摇了人们对跨国护理网络潜力的既定信念。正如2019冠状病毒病大流行的经验所表明的那样,曾经看似持久的规则可能会被长期搁置。波兰是受人口流动严重影响的国家之一,讨论移徙对护理网络的影响至关重要。作为流动的直接后果,移徙者(特别是妇女)对其留下的家庭的期望和义务可能会改变、转移,甚至不受限制,尽管他们住在国外。然而,在老龄化社会中为老年家庭成员制定家庭护理战略也是基于可获得移徙劳工的假设。本文利用两组数据,探讨了在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,代际义务是如何协商的,以及相关的跨境长期限制是否导致了护理提供模式的变化。*本文属于“社会主义国家转型前后东欧和西欧人口发展”特刊。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
26 weeks
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