Foreword by Thomas Weisner
Acknowledgments
About the Editors
Contributors
Introduction
Maria Rosario T. de Guzman, Jill Brown, and Carolyn Pope
Edwards
Section 1: Economic Migration and Family Dispersal
1. Scattering Seeds in Las Orquideas: The Role of Kin Networks in
Ecuadorian Parental Emigration
Heather Rae-Espinoza
2. Migration and "Skipped Generation" Households in Thailand
Berit Ingersoll-Dayton, Sureeporn Punpuing, Kanchana Tangchonlatip,
& Laura Yakas
3. Fictive Kinships and the Re-Making of Family Life in the Context
of Paid Domestic Work: The Case of Philippine Yayas
Maria Rosario T. de Guzman, Minerva D. Tuliao, & Aileen S.
Garcia
4. Changing Country, Changing Gender Roles: Migration to Norway and
the Transformation of Gender Roles Among Polish Families
Natasza Kosakowska-Berezecka, Magdalena Zadkowska, Brita Gjerstad,
Kuba Krys, Anna Kwiatkowska, Gunhild Odden, Oleksandr Ryndyk,
Justyna Swidrak, & Gunn Vedøy
5. Parental Migration and Well-being of Left-Behind Children from a
Comparative Perspective
Yao Lu
Section 2: Family Separation in the Context of Social and Political
Crises
6. The Making of 'Orphans': How the 'Orphan Rescue' Movement is
Transforming Family and Jeopardizing Child Wellbeing in Uganda
Kristen Cheney
7. Imagined and Occasional Co-Presence in Open Adoption: How
Adoptive Parents Mediate Birth Connections
Mandi MacDonald
8. Untold Transnational Family Life on the Sonora-Arizona
Border
Marcela Sotomayor-Peterson & Ana A. Lucero-Liu
9. The Experience of Families Separated by Military Deployment
Ruth Ellingsen, Catherine Mogil, & Patricia Lester
Section 3: Personal Crises and Family Dispersal
10. Children as Providers and Recipients of Support: Redefining
Family Among Child-Headed Households in Namibia
Mónica Ruiz-Casares, Shelene Gentz, & Jesse Beatson
11. Parenting from Prison: The Reality and Experience of
Distance
Joyce A. Arditti & Jonathon J. Beckmeyer
12. Distance Mothering: The Case of Nonresidential Mothers
Michelle Bemiller
Section 4: Family Separation as a Normative Cultural Practice and
in Pursuit of Educational Opportunities
13. 'Raising Another's Child': Gifting, Communicating and
Persevering in Northern Namibia
Jill Brown
14. Satellite Babies: Costs and benefits of culturally driven
parent-infant separations in North American immigrant families
Yvonne Bohr, Cindy H. Liu, Stephen H. Chen, & Leslie K. Wang
15. Going the Distance: Transnational Educational Migrant Families
in Korea
Sumie Okazaki & Jeehun Kim
16. Where Should My Child Go to School? Parent and Child
Considerations in Binational Families
Edmund T. Hamann, Víctor Zúñiga, & Juan Sánchez García
Index
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.
"[In this book] The editors and contributors challenge mainstream
parenting and child development scholars by drawing attention to
non-typical parenting conditions that impact millions of children
worldwide. Cutting across disciplinary and cultural boundaries,
each chapter systematically tells stories and presents data of
children raised by parents from afar in diverse family structures.
Contributors tackle distinct parenting-from-afar conditions,
ranging from
incarcerated parents to military and refugee families to immigrant
families, all in a well-balanced and appropriately-sensitive
manner. This powerful volume is a must-read, pioneering compendium
for
scientists, practitioners, educators, interventionists, and policy
makers."
-- Gustavo Carlo, Millsap Professor of Diversity and Multicultural
Studies and Co-Director, Center for Children and Families Across
Cultures, University of Missouri
"In Parenting from Afar, international scholars describe the
diversity of family arrangements across physical distances,
expanding our views of traditional family life, roles, and coping,
as well as questioning norms and beliefs about parenting, child
rearing, kinship, and the 'normal family.' Each fascinating chapter
identifies the centrality of the ecocultural context for
understanding family, challenging established developmental
theories and
setting the stage for future research that must address such
diversity."
-- Deborah Best, William L. Poteat Professor of Psychology, Wake
Forest University
"What these editors do so well is provide convincing evidence that
families that are close-knit while living far apart are not only
found in the 'majority world' but also exist, albeit largely
ignored in the scholarly literature, across the Western Educated
Industrialized Rich and democratic world. This book should be
required reading for all who study 'the family.'"
-- Jonathan Tudge, Professor of Human Development and Family
Studies, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
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