Transnational families and the circulation of care: a Romanian-German case study
Transnational families and the circulation of care: a Romanian-German case study
This article contributes to our understanding of transnational family relationships and the circulation of care. We are interested in understanding how large-scale emigration affects the support and care of older people in the origin country. Using in-depth interviews and participant observation, we examine the significance of transnational family support for older people, and the ways in which migrant children and other kin care for elderly relatives from afar. Our case study is of the Transylvanian Saxons, a German-speaking minority in Romania, who experienced mass-exodus to Germany following the end of socialism in 1990. The lapse of time since the exodus allows us to examine how transnational family practices evolve, and what the challenges are to maintaining family-hood over time and distance. Contrary to expectations, we find that material family support from Germany to Romania is not significant and has declined. Care, by contrast, remains an important part of what most transnational families provide, although practices of ‘caring about’ are more prevalent than hands-on ‘caring for’. Counter to optimistic accounts of transnational family care in the literature, we argue that the difficulties and challenges for older people of being cared for by distant family members are fundamental, and strong transnational family ties are not an inevitable outcome of migration.
transnational family support, care, remittances, migration, Romania, Germany, Qualitative Research
45-73
Schröder-Butterfill, Elisabeth
b10e106a-4d5d-4f41-a7d2-9549ba425711
Schonheinz, Julia
f0455080-4373-44ca-ae24-df467f0c9f41
15 January 2019
Schröder-Butterfill, Elisabeth
b10e106a-4d5d-4f41-a7d2-9549ba425711
Schonheinz, Julia
f0455080-4373-44ca-ae24-df467f0c9f41
Schröder-Butterfill, Elisabeth and Schonheinz, Julia
(2019)
Transnational families and the circulation of care: a Romanian-German case study.
Ageing & Society, 39 (1), .
(doi:10.1017/S0144686X1700099X).
Abstract
This article contributes to our understanding of transnational family relationships and the circulation of care. We are interested in understanding how large-scale emigration affects the support and care of older people in the origin country. Using in-depth interviews and participant observation, we examine the significance of transnational family support for older people, and the ways in which migrant children and other kin care for elderly relatives from afar. Our case study is of the Transylvanian Saxons, a German-speaking minority in Romania, who experienced mass-exodus to Germany following the end of socialism in 1990. The lapse of time since the exodus allows us to examine how transnational family practices evolve, and what the challenges are to maintaining family-hood over time and distance. Contrary to expectations, we find that material family support from Germany to Romania is not significant and has declined. Care, by contrast, remains an important part of what most transnational families provide, although practices of ‘caring about’ are more prevalent than hands-on ‘caring for’. Counter to optimistic accounts of transnational family care in the literature, we argue that the difficulties and challenges for older people of being cared for by distant family members are fundamental, and strong transnational family ties are not an inevitable outcome of migration.
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Transnational family support_accepted manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 21 June 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 September 2017
Published date: 15 January 2019
Keywords:
transnational family support, care, remittances, migration, Romania, Germany, Qualitative Research
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Local EPrints ID: 413261
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/413261
ISSN: 0144-686X
PURE UUID: 5b6cff1a-d3d6-413b-8785-6b44c639a78b
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Date deposited: 18 Aug 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:39
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Author:
Julia Schonheinz
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