2019冠状病毒病时代南非-津巴布韦移民走廊跨国家庭代际亲属网络的支持

IF 0.5 Q4 SOCIOLOGY
Gracsious Maviza, Divane Nzima
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在大多数非洲家庭中,代际支持是一种共同的文化期望和义务。这是一种相互团结的形式,一代人利用自己的特权来帮助有需要的一代人。这是典型的父母和孩子之间的关心和支持关系。当父母照顾和供养他们的孩子时,不言而喻的期望是他们在投资,因为他们的孩子将来有义务照顾他们。在津巴布韦,这一社会契约的义务导致许多人移徙到其他国家寻找经济机会。然而,随着2019冠状病毒病大流行的爆发及其带来的经济困难,这些互惠关系受到了负面影响。本文以五对父母和五名成年子女组成的夫妇的生活史为背景,评估了COVID-19的影响以及南非移民面临的经济困难。它探讨了2019冠状病毒病大流行期间实施的治理体系以及南非跨国移民的不稳定性如何影响跨国家庭内代际物质支持。调查结果显示,这一流行病严重影响了跨国家庭的代际支持。为遏制这一流行病的蔓延而制定的限制性措施使南非境内移徙儿童在提供父母支助方面作出了显著调整。父母的支持超越了互惠和利他主义,体现了道德经济观点中蕴含的深刻道德价值,即尽管大流行带来了经济困难,但儿童仍然致力于为父母提供支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Intergenerational Kinship Networks of Support Within Transnational Families in the era of COVID-19 in the South Africa–Zimbabwe Migration Corridor
ABSTRACT Intergenerational support is a common cultural expectation and obligation in most African families. It is a form of reciprocal solidarity wherein a generation uses its privileges to assist a generation in need. This is typical of care and support relationships between parents and their children. As parents care and provide for their children, the unspoken expectation is that they are investing as their children will be obliged to take care of them in the future. In Zimbabwe, the obligations of this social contract have led many to migrate to other countries in search of economic opportunities. However, with the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and the resultant economic hardships, these reciprocal relationships have been negatively impacted. This paper assesses the impact of COVID-19 and the economic difficulties faced by migrants in South Africa, drawing from the life histories of dyads of five parents and five adult children. It explores how the governance systems implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic and the precarity of transnational migrants in South Africa affected intergenerational material support within transnational families. Findings reveal that the pandemic significantly affected intergenerational support within transnational families. The restrictive measures crafted to curb the spread of the pandemic led to notable adaptations in the provision of parental support by migrant children in South Africa. Parental support went beyond reciprocity and altruism, exhibiting a profound moral value embedded in the moral economy perspective, where children remain committed to providing support to their parents despite the economic struggles presented by the pandemic.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
25.00%
发文量
26
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