Mothering in the margin: a narrative inquiry of women with children in a homeless shelter

IF 1.1 Q3 SOCIAL WORK
Katharina A. Azim, Laurie Macgillivray, Donalyn Heise
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

ABSTRACT Women living with their children in residential treatment family homeless shelters are often stigmatized on multiple fronts: for their addictions, being “homeless”, and assumptions about their mothering skills. This qualitative narrative inquiry study explored women’s experiences of living in a homeless shelter with their children as they recover from alcohol/drug addiction. Specifically, we examined the various ways in which the women conceptualized and performed mothering while residing at the New Beginnings shelter (pseudonym) in the mid-Southern U.S. Understanding the complexities of the women’s social, emotional, and health-based contexts can enable institutions to examine and shape implicit and explicit assumptions surrounding motherhood. We employed semi-structured interviews with six women and analyzed transcripts using two rounds of thematic coding. Five recurring themes emerged. The findings illustrate the way “appropriate mothering” is situated in specific institutional, political, historical, and economic contexts. We suggest hegemonic assumptions need to be interrogated to better serve families in crisis.
边缘的母性:对无家可归者收容所里带着孩子的妇女的叙事性调查
与孩子一起住在寄宿治疗家庭无家可归者收容所的妇女经常在多个方面受到歧视:成瘾,“无家可归”,以及对其母亲技能的假设。这项定性叙事探究研究探讨了妇女在从酒精/毒品成瘾中恢复过来时与子女一起住在无家可归者收容所的经历。具体来说,我们研究了居住在美国中南部新起点庇护所(化名)的妇女概念化和执行母性的各种方式。了解妇女的社会、情感和健康背景的复杂性,可以使机构检查和塑造围绕母性的隐性和显性假设。我们对六名女性进行了半结构化访谈,并使用两轮主题编码分析了记录。五个反复出现的主题出现了。研究结果表明,“适当的育儿”是在特定的制度、政治、历史和经济背景下进行的。我们建议,需要质疑霸权假设,以便更好地为处于危机中的家庭服务。
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
自引率
14.30%
发文量
40
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