Parenting From Afar and the Reconfiguration of Family Across Distance
★★★★★
★★★★★
English
An increasing number of families around the world are now living apart from one another, subsequently causing the defining and redefining of their relationships, roles within the family unit, and how to effectively maintain a sense of familial cohesion through distance. Edited by Maria Rosario T. de Guzman, Jill Brown, and Carolyn Pope Edwards, Parenting From Afar and the Reconfiguration of Family Across Distance uniquely highlights how families--both in times of crisis and within normative cultural practices--organize and configure themselves and their parenting through physical separation. In this volume, readers are given a unique look into the lives of families around the world that are affected by separation due to a wide range of circumstances including economic migration, fosterage, divorce, military deployment, education, and orphanhood. Contributing authors from the fields of psychology, anthropology, sociology, education, and geography all delve deep into the daily realities of these families and share insight on why they live apart from one another, how families are redefined across long distances, and the impact absence has on various members within the unit. An especially timely volume, Parenting From Afar and the Reconfiguration of Family Across Distance offers readers an important understanding and examination of family life in response to social change and shifts in the caregiving context.
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Product Details
Weight: 658g
Dimensions: 241 x 160mm
Publication Date: 31 May 2018
Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780190265076
About
Maria Rosario T. de Guzman is an Associate Professor and Extension Specialist in the Department of Child Youth and Family Studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Her work focuses on the intersection of culture migration family life and child and adolescent development. She is also interested in how sociocultural factors relate to children's prosocial socialization. Jill Brown is an Associate Professor of Psychology at Creighton University. She received her BA and her PhD from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. While her roots are in the Midwest her work has taken her to other parts of the world: she was a Peace Corps volunteer in Namibia and received a Fulbright Fellowship to study in Varanasi India. She is the current President of the Society of Cross Cultural Research. Her current research focuses on kinship adoption and socially distributed child care and family life and cognition and thinking across cultures. Carolyn Pope Edwards is Willa Cather Professor Emeritus of Psychology and Child Youth and Family Studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Her interests center on social and moral development in cultural contexts socialization processes within the family and international early childhood education. She has conducted research and held research positions at universities in Italy Norway and Kenya.