母性与女性移民:香港外籍家庭佣工的证据

IF 2.3 2区 文学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Jing Song, Weiwen Lai, Eric Fong
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引用次数: 0

摘要

女性家庭佣工往往在不同的环境中扮演多重角色,例如母亲和移民。本研究从时间角度出发,重点关注女性在为人母和移民的时间安排上的不同轨迹。尽管她们为雇主从事的有偿工作与为自己家庭提供的无偿照料之间存在连续性,而且两者都高度女性化,但移民妇女往往面临两者之间的紧张和冲突;很难同时成为一名好工人和好母亲。本研究以香港外籍家庭佣工调查为基础,定量描绘了一些女性如何在成为母亲之前和之后决定迁移,以及她们不同的长期迁移倾向。研究结果支持一种选择性过程,即受过高等教育的女性更有可能成为非母亲移民;她们更有可能在年轻时和未婚时移民。然而,随着时间的推移,第一次移民时已为人母的移民更有可能进行多次移民。这种喜忧参半的研究结果表明,妇女的移徙与母性之间存在着复杂的相互关系,这一方面可能反映了母亲反复移徙的需要,另一方面也反映了性别观念,即移徙妇女仍然被视为忽视家庭和偏离女性的家庭责任。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Motherhood and Women’s Migration: Evidence from Foreign Domestic Workers in Hong Kong
Female domestic workers often take on multiple roles in different settings, such as that of mothers and migrants. This study focuses on women’s diverse trajectories in timing motherhood and migration from a temporal perspective. Despite the continuities between their paid work for their employers and unpaid care for their own families, both of which are highly feminized, migrant women often face tensions and conflicts between the two; it is difficult to be a good worker and a good mother at the same time. Drawing on the Survey of Foreign Domestic Workers in Hong Kong, this study provides a quantitative picture of how some women decide to move before becoming mothers and some afterward, as well as their different long-term mobility tendencies. The findings lend support to a selectivity process that highly educated women are more likely to be non-mother migrants; they are more likely to move at a younger age and when they are unmarried. However, over time, migrants who were mothers at the time of their first migration are more likely to conduct multiple moves. Such mixed findings suggest that women’s migration is interrelated with motherhood in complex ways, which may reflect the need of repeated migration by mothers on the one hand, and the gender beliefs that continue to regard migrant women as neglecting their families and deviating from feminine domesticity on the other.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
3.10%
发文量
190
期刊介绍: American Behavioral Scientist has been a valuable source of information for scholars, researchers, professionals, and students, providing in-depth perspectives on intriguing contemporary topics throughout the social and behavioral sciences. Each issue offers comprehensive analysis of a single topic, examining such important and diverse arenas as sociology, international and U.S. politics, behavioral sciences, communication and media, economics, education, ethnic and racial studies, terrorism, and public service. The journal"s interdisciplinary approach stimulates creativity and occasionally, controversy within the emerging frontiers of the social sciences, exploring the critical issues that affect our world and challenge our thinking.
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