编辑父亲关系

M. Nduna, G. Khunou
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引用次数: 3

摘要

2014年,在经历了100多年的殖民统治和种族隔离造成的制度化歧视之后,南非迎来了20年的民主。“破碎”的家庭结构是全球后殖民和战后国家政治不稳定留下的可悲遗产之一。在种族隔离政府对黑人的歧视和系统的移民劳工制度之后,这种家庭破碎的现象在南非很明显。农民工制度使父亲与家庭分离,男人离开农村社区的家庭,到城市地区迅速发展的矿山和工厂工作。当前的民主国家有责任通过基于研究证据的政策和干预来加强破碎的家庭。关于战后和后殖民背景下父亲关系的研究正在兴起。本期特刊汇集了八篇关于南非父亲关系的文章。这些文章提供了来自不同但有趣的研究的数据;例如,Nduna M和Taulela M的文章关注的是那些在缺席和不知名父亲的陪伴下长大的年轻人“发现”生父的经历。这篇文章的参与者是来自普马兰加省一个小镇的年轻女性。通过叙事分析,文章探讨了年轻人如何处理发现自己的生父是谁。在Selebano N和Khunou G的文章中,探讨了索韦托年轻父亲的经历。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editorial Father Connections
South Africa celebrated twenty years of democracy in 2014 following more than 100 years of colonization and institutionalized discrimination through Apartheid. A 'broken' family structure is one of the pathetic legacies left by political instability in post-colonial and post war countries globally. This phenomenon of broken families is evident in South Africa following the period of discrimination against Black people and the systematic migrant labor system that was sponsored by and for the Apartheid government. The migrant labor system separated fathers from their families and men left their families in the rural communities to work in the burgeoning mines and factories in urban areas. The current democratic State has a responsibility to strengthen broken families through policies and intervention informed by research evidence. There is an emerging body of research on Father Connections in post-war and post-colonial settings. This special issue brings together eight articles on Father Connections in South Africa. The articles present data from diverse but interesting research; for example the piece by Nduna M and Taulela M focuses on the experiences of 'discovering' biological fathers for youth who grew up with absent and unknown fathers. The participants that the article draws from are young women from a small town, in Mpumalanga. Through narrative analysis, the article explores how young people deal with finding out who their biological fathers are. In the article by Selebano N and Khunou G, the experiences of young fathers from Soweto are explored.
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