Type | Working Paper |
Title | Intergenerational Relationships and the Life Course: Changing Relations between Children and Caregivers in Ethiopia |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
URL | http://r4d.dfid.gov.uk/pdf/outputs/Younglives/wp99-tafere-intergenerational-relationships.pdf |
Abstract | Drawing on three rounds of survey and qualitativ e data collected by the Young Lives study in Ethiopia among children born in 1994–95 and thei r caregivers, this paper investigates intergenerational relationships by means of the life-course perspective. The life-course perspective establishes the importance of under standing intergenerational relationships within changing contexts of time and place. The study shows that parent–child relations are taken for granted when children are young; but as they grow older, parental expectations and filial obli gations become explicit. In the context of rapid social change, which sometimes carries risks fo r children, parents assume that they have an obligation to guide their children. With the expansion of modern education and childr en’s exposure to differ ent experiences outside the family, many of them contest parental values, norms and expectations. Schooling and other competing agents of ‘socialisation’ have contri buted to increased inter generational conflicts and negotiations. One important outcome of such changes is the transformation of relationships based on traditional processes of soci alisation where norms and practi ces have been simply transmitted across generations, into ‘negotiat ed’ relationships where child ren’s agency become increasingly visible. On the other hand, in the contex t of poverty and social change, children’s key transitions have become more unpredictable. For ex ample, at one and the same age, children could be in school, or in paid work, or married, or hav ing their own child. Such multiple pathways make it difficult for parents to transfer traditional age -based societal norms. The unpr edictability and multiplicity of transitions are also major challenges for the life- course perspective as app lied to intergenerational relationships. A life-course perspective needs to adapt to such changing ci rcumstances, using the type of longitudinal evidence on which this paper is based. |
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