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Doing voice, doing family: conceptualisations and practices of voice among transnational families from the Philippines

Doing voice, doing family: conceptualisations and practices of voice among transnational families from the Philippines
Doing voice, doing family: conceptualisations and practices of voice among transnational families from the Philippines
This paper is inspired by the developments in student voice and migration studies. Migration scholarship claims that children’s voices in decision-making processes of transnational families are often relegated to a secondary status (Christ, 2017; de los Reyes, 2020; Lam & Yeoh, 2019ab). Ironically, when adult-driven migration projects fail, children are forced to become adults (de los Reyes, 2020) and help in meeting their family’s economic needs through the gig economy. In the Philippines, these contradictions result to strained family relationships, lack of co-ownership of decisions, and lower academic resilience among left-behind children (henceforth, LBCs) (ECMI/AOS-Manila et al., 2004; Carandang et al., 2007, in Asis & Marave, 2013).

In student voice research, ‘voice’ is considered as a myriad of learners’ ways, whether verbal or non-verbal, of expressing their views and participation in dialogue, and in examining and providing solutions to issues that matter to them (Messiou, 2018; Fielding & McGregor, 2005; Cook-Sather, 2005). At the same time, the field of student voice research also considers voice as ‘dynamic and contextual’ (Messiou, 2023) which directs attention to the need to generate cultural accounts of thinking about and practicing ‘voice’, especially from non-western, and in the Global South.

Mobilising these developments in understanding ‘voice’ among families, this study asks the question, “what counts as ‘voice’ of children when families decide about migration and education of left-behind children?” Addressing this question is important because if opens up spaces for new thinking and ‘doing’ voice that takes into account various contexts where interaction among stakeholders happen. For example, what do migrant mothers from developing Southeast Asian countries such as the Philippines consider as expression of their children’s voice or as ways of listening to them? At the same time, what do left-behind children think as genuine expression of their voice and well-meaning ways of including them in family decision-making? By looking at conceptualisations and practices of ‘voice’ from the perspective of Filipina migrant mothers and their left-behind children, cultural and intergenerational perspectives on voice is offered.

To respond to the core and sub-questions above, this paper will use data from interviews with (1) 40 migrant Filipinas working as domestic workers in Hong Kong and Singapore, and as nursing professionals in the United Kingdom and Australia; and (2) 40 left-behind children (12-18 years old) based in the Philippines.
Student voice, migration, transnational mothering, childhood, parenting
de los Reyes, Jay
24bed502-d1a7-460b-9657-6d24a7ffa4c5
de los Reyes, Jay
24bed502-d1a7-460b-9657-6d24a7ffa4c5

de los Reyes, Jay (2024) Doing voice, doing family: conceptualisations and practices of voice among transnational families from the Philippines. European Conference on Educational Research, University of Cyprus, Nicosia, Cyprus. 27 - 30 Aug 2024.

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

This paper is inspired by the developments in student voice and migration studies. Migration scholarship claims that children’s voices in decision-making processes of transnational families are often relegated to a secondary status (Christ, 2017; de los Reyes, 2020; Lam & Yeoh, 2019ab). Ironically, when adult-driven migration projects fail, children are forced to become adults (de los Reyes, 2020) and help in meeting their family’s economic needs through the gig economy. In the Philippines, these contradictions result to strained family relationships, lack of co-ownership of decisions, and lower academic resilience among left-behind children (henceforth, LBCs) (ECMI/AOS-Manila et al., 2004; Carandang et al., 2007, in Asis & Marave, 2013).

In student voice research, ‘voice’ is considered as a myriad of learners’ ways, whether verbal or non-verbal, of expressing their views and participation in dialogue, and in examining and providing solutions to issues that matter to them (Messiou, 2018; Fielding & McGregor, 2005; Cook-Sather, 2005). At the same time, the field of student voice research also considers voice as ‘dynamic and contextual’ (Messiou, 2023) which directs attention to the need to generate cultural accounts of thinking about and practicing ‘voice’, especially from non-western, and in the Global South.

Mobilising these developments in understanding ‘voice’ among families, this study asks the question, “what counts as ‘voice’ of children when families decide about migration and education of left-behind children?” Addressing this question is important because if opens up spaces for new thinking and ‘doing’ voice that takes into account various contexts where interaction among stakeholders happen. For example, what do migrant mothers from developing Southeast Asian countries such as the Philippines consider as expression of their children’s voice or as ways of listening to them? At the same time, what do left-behind children think as genuine expression of their voice and well-meaning ways of including them in family decision-making? By looking at conceptualisations and practices of ‘voice’ from the perspective of Filipina migrant mothers and their left-behind children, cultural and intergenerational perspectives on voice is offered.

To respond to the core and sub-questions above, this paper will use data from interviews with (1) 40 migrant Filipinas working as domestic workers in Hong Kong and Singapore, and as nursing professionals in the United Kingdom and Australia; and (2) 40 left-behind children (12-18 years old) based in the Philippines.

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More information

Published date: 27 August 2024
Venue - Dates: European Conference on Educational Research, University of Cyprus, Nicosia, Cyprus, 2024-08-27 - 2024-08-30
Keywords: Student voice, migration, transnational mothering, childhood, parenting

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 508922
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508922
PURE UUID: dab54bb3-de68-4835-9c67-b23f6dd0102e
ORCID for Jay de los Reyes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3609-127X

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Date deposited: 06 Feb 2026 17:40
Last modified: 07 Feb 2026 03:19

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Author: Jay de los Reyes ORCID iD

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