协商母性与权威:菲律宾跨国家庭中非移民妻子养育未成年子女的经验。

IF 2.2 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
Frontiers in Sociology Pub Date : 2025-08-13 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fsoc.2025.1656817
Peachy Domingo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

跨国菲律宾家庭源于临时劳工移民,通常父母一方在国外。这改变了家庭生活,影响了亲子关系和性别动态,以及对留守儿童的照顾。然而,非移民母亲在维持生命和提供护理方面的关键作用在研究中往往被忽视。本研究探讨菲律宾跨国家庭的非移民妻子如何维持和协商她们在抚养青春期子女方面的权威。本研究采用定性描述方法,对来自菲律宾农村跨国家庭的20名菲律宾母亲进行访谈。研究结果显示,非移民母亲通过各种策略来加强其权威,如采用威权式养育方式,利用海外菲律宾工人(OFW)丈夫的权威,将家务委派给青少年子女,并就其权威和子女的自主权进行谈判。在考察菲律宾跨国家庭时,本研究提供了一个关于母亲权威的新视角,将其执行置于母亲与其海外劳工丈夫的重要且通常相等的经济贡献的背景下。本文认为,母性权威受到好母亲意识形态的深刻塑造,在这种意识形态中,母亲积极推动孩子的积极行为和价值观,作为自己效能的证明,尽管她们的OFW丈夫不在。这项研究的独特贡献在于展示了母亲是如何通过不断地唠叨和训斥青春期的孩子来实现这一目标的。相对于丈夫的汇款,母亲的经济贡献会显著影响其产妇控制策略的有效性和她对子女的权威感知。此外,当她们的直接权威不足时,母亲会战略性地利用外劳丈夫的传统惩戒角色,突出一个关键的、尚未得到充分探索的互惠动态:非移民妻子加强了外劳父亲的权威,而外劳丈夫的参与同时赋予了母亲的惩戒行动权力。这种角色和经济贡献之间错综复杂的相互作用使我们对跨国家庭结构中父母权威的理解与众不同。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Negotiating motherhood and authority: the experience of non-migrant wives in parenting their adolescent children from Filipino transnational families.

Transnational Filipino families arise from temporary labor migration, often with one parent abroad. This reshapes family life, impacting parent-child relationship and gender dynamics, and caregiving for children left-behind. However, non-migrant mothers' crucial role in sustaining life and providing care is often overlooked in studies. This study examines how non-migrant wives in Filipino transnational families maintain and negotiate their authority in raising their adolescent children. This study utilized qualitative descriptive approach in conducting interviews with 20 Filipino mothers from transnational families in rural Philippines. Findings revealed that non-migrant mothers enforce their authority through various strategies such as the adoption of authoritarian parenting style, leveraging the authority of the Overseas Filipino Worker (OFW) husbands, chore delegation among adolescent children, and engage in negotiations regarding both their authority and their children's autonomy. In examining Filipino transnational families, this study offers a novel perspective on maternal authority, situating its enforcement within the context of mothers' significant and often equal financial contributions with their OFW husbands. This paper argues that maternal authority is profoundly shaped by the good motherhood ideology, where mothers actively promote children's positive behavior and values as a testament to their own efficacy despite the absence of their OFW husbands. The unique contribution of this study lies in demonstrating how mothers primarily achieve this through consistent nagging and reprimanding their adolescent children. A mother's financial contribution, relative to her husband's remittances, significantly affects the effectiveness of her maternal control strategies and her perceived authority over their children. Furthermore, when their direct authority is insufficient, mothers strategically leverage the traditional disciplinarian role of their OFW husbands, highlighting a critical, yet under-explored, reciprocal dynamic: non-migrant wives reinforce the OFW father's authority, while the OFW husband's involvement simultaneously empowers the mother's disciplinary actions. This intricate interplay of roles and financial contributions distinguishes our understanding of parental authority in transnational family structures.

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来源期刊
Frontiers in Sociology
Frontiers in Sociology Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
4.00%
发文量
198
审稿时长
14 weeks
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