2,562 research outputs found
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Children's caring roles and responsibilities within the family in Africa
In many Sub-Saharan African countries, the care of chronically ill, disabled or elderly relatives is usually regarded as the responsibility of family members, within a broader landscape of often overburdened healthcare systems, the expense of medical fees, very limited access to social protection and policies that emphasise home-based care. Recent studies have demonstrated that children and youth, particularly girls and young women, take on considerable caring roles for chronically ill and elderly relatives in Africa. This article reviews the available research on young peopleās caring roles and responsibilities within families affected by chronic illness and disability in Sub-Saharan Africa. I discuss how childrenās caring roles challenge global and local constructions of childhood and suggest ways of conceptualising the socio-spatial and embodied dimensions of childrenās everyday care work within diverse household forms. I analyse evidence on outcomes of care and childrenās resilience in managing their caring responsibilities and examine the complex array of processes that influence whether children take on caring roles within the family. I argue that relational, intergenerational and lifecourse approaches to researching childrenās caring responsibilities within the family have considerable potential for future geographical research and could provide further insights into the ways that care is embedded in social relations, cultural norms and structural inequalities operating in different configurations in particular places
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The experiences and priorities of young people who care for their siblings in Tanzania and Uganda
This report presents key findings from a small-scale pilot research project that explored the experiences and priorities of young people caring for their siblings in sibling-headed households affected by AIDS in Tanzania and Uganda. Qualitative and participatory research was conducted with 33 young people living in sibling-headed households and 39 NGO staff and community members in rural and urban areas of Tanzania and Uganda. The report analyses the ways that young people manage transitions to caring for their younger siblings following their parentsā death and the impacts of caring on their family relations, education, emotional wellbeing and health, social lives and their transitions to adulthood. The study highlights gendered- and age-related differences in the nature and extent of young peopleās care work and discusses young peopleās needs and priorities for action, based on the views of young people, NGO staff and community members. Meeting the basic needs of young people living in sibling-headed households, listening to young peopleās views, fostering peer support and relationships of trust with supportive adults, raising awareness and advocacy emerge as key priorities to safeguard the rights of children and young people living in sibling-headed households and challenge the stigma and marginalisation they sometimes face
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Negotiating social identities: the influence of gender, age and ethnicity on young peopleās āStreet Careersā in Tanzania
This paper explores the diverse ways that children and young people negotiate their social identities and construct their life course trajectories on the street, based on ethnographic research with street children in Tanzania. Drawing on the concept of a āstreet careerā, I show how differences of age, gender and ethnicity intersect with the time spent on the street, to influence young peopleās livelihood strategies, use of public space, access to services, and adherence to cultural rites of passage. Using the notion of āgender performativityā, I analyse how young people actively reconfigure gender norms and the concept of āthe familyā on the street
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Safeguarding inheritance and enhancing the resilience of orphaned young people living in child- and youth-headed households in Tanzania and Uganda
This paper explores the resilience of orphaned young people in safeguarding the physical assets (land and property) that they inherited from their parents and in sustaining their households without a co-resident adult relative. Drawing on the concept of resilience and the sustainable livelihoods framework, this paper analyses the findings of an exploratory study conducted with 15 orphaned young people heading households,18 of their siblings and 39 NGO workers and community members in Tanzania and Uganda. The research suggests that inherited land and property represent key determining factors in the formation and viability of child- and youth-headed households in both rural and urban areas. Despite experiences of stigma and marginalisation in the community, social networks were crucial in enabling young people to protect themselves and their property, in providing access to material and emotional resources and in enhancing their skills and capabilities to develop sustainable livelihoods. Support for child- and youth-headed households needs to recognise young people's agency and adopt a holistic approach to their lives that analyses the physical assets, material resources, human and social capital available to the household, as well as individual young people's wellbeing, outlook and aspirations. Alongside cash transfers and material support, youth-led collective mobilisation that is sustained over time may also help to build resilience and foster more supportive social environments that challenge property grabbing and the stigmatisation of child- and youth-headed households
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Social networks, migration, and care in Tanzania
This paper explores the impacts of the HIV/AIDS epidemic on children and families in northern
Tanzania using the concept of social resilience.1 The study is based on the findings of childfocused
research with street children and children and families from HIV/AIDS-affected households.
The paper illustrates the coping strategies that children and young people, and parents and
caregivers adopt at the household level. In particular, it examines how the burden of care affects
different generations of women and highlights their resilience, together with the importance of
social networks and the fluidity of movement between rural and urban areas. The research
suggests that migrating to urban areas to seek a living in the informal sector represents a survival
strategy adopted by some children and young people orphaned by AIDS when their families and
communities are unable or unwilling to support them. The paper concludes by exploring parentsā,
caregiversā, childrenās, and young peopleās views on the forms of social support that would
promote their resilience and thereby help to mitigate the impacts of the epidemic at the
household level
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HIV-related stigma, asset inheritance and chronic poverty: vulnerability and resilience of widows and caregiving children and youth in Tanzania and Uganda
This paper develops a framework of risk and protective factors to conceptualise the relationship between HIV-related stigma, asset inheritance and chronic poverty among widows and caregiving children and youth in eastern Africa. Analysis of two qualitative studies with 85 participants in rural and urban areas of Tanzania and Uganda reveals that gendered and generational inequalities and stigmatisation sometimes led to property grabbing and chronic poverty. Human and social capital and preventative measures however may help widows and caregiving young people in HIV-affected households to safeguard land and other assets, within a wider supportive environment that seeks to tackle structural inequalities
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Inheritance, access to resources and poverty in Serer families in Senegal
This research explores the relationship between inheritance, access to resources and the intergenerational transmission of poverty among the Serer ethnic group in rural and urban environments in Senegal. In many Sub-Saharan African countries, customary law excludes women from owning and inheriting assets, such as land and property. Yet, assets controlled by women often result in increased investments in the next generation's health, nutrition and schooling and reduce the intergenerational transmission of poverty.
Qualitative research with 60 participants in Senegal reveals the important role that land, housing and financial assets may play in building resilience to household shocks and interrupting the intergenerational transmission of poverty. However, the protection afforded by these assets was often dependent on other factors, including human, social and environmental capital. The death of a spouse or parent had major emotional and material impacts on many Serer families. The inheritance and control of assets and resources was strongly differentiated among family members along lines of gender, age and generation. Younger widows and their children were particularly vulnerable to chronic poverty. Although inheritance disputes were rare, the research suggests they are more likely between co-wives in polygamous unions and their children, particularly in urban areas. In addition to experiencing economic and health-related shocks, many interviewees were exposed to a range of climate-related risks and environmental pressures which increased their vulnerability. Family members coped with these shocks and risks by diversifying livelihoods, migrating to urban areas and other regions for work, participating in women's co-operatives and associations and developing supportive social networks with extended family and community members.
Policies and practices that may help to alleviate poverty, safeguard women's and young people's inheritance and build resilience to financial, health-related and environmental shocks and risks include:
- Social protection measures targeted towards poor widows and orphaned children, such as social and cash transfers to pay for basic needs including food, healthcare and children's schooling.
- Micro-finance initiatives and credit and savings schemes, alongside training and capacity-building targeted to women and young people to develop income-generation activities and skills.
- Free legal advice, support and advocacy for women and young people to pursue inheritance claims through the legal system.
- Raising awareness about women's and children's legal rights and working with government and community and religious leaders to tackle discriminatory inheritance practices and contradictions caused by legal pluralism.
- Increasing women's control of land and access to inputs, enhancing their business, organisational, and leadership skills and promoting civic participation in local, regional and national decision-making processes.
- Improving access to basic services in rural areas, particularly healthcare, building the quality of education and promoting girls' access to education
- Enhancing agricultural production and providing more employment opportunities, apprenticeships and vocational training for young people, particularly in rural areas
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Negotiating intergenerational relations and care in diverse African contexts
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Children as caregivers
Caregiving is usually associated with adultsā responsibilities. Official statistics and research have demonstrated, however, that many children and young people in the global North and South have substantial, regular caring responsibilities for family members with chronic illnesses, impairments or other care needs. This chapter conceptualises childrenās roles as ācaregiversā and the care work they do. It then analyses the available evidence on outcomes of childrenās caregiving and the factors and processes influencing their involvement. While research reveals that caregiving may have positive as well as negative outcomes for childrenās well-being, formal and informal safety nets are needed, especially in resource-limited settings, to alleviate childrenās care work. Childrenās and familiesā experiences suggest that social protection measures and support for those being cared for as well as those providing care would help to ensure that caregiving does not have long-term negative impacts on childrenās personal development, education, health, family relations, peer interactions, social participation, employment opportunities and socially expected transitions to adulthood
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