Type | Working Paper |
Title | Promoting young fathers’ positive involvement in their children’s lives |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
URL | http://www.hsrc.ac.za/uploads/pageContent/3323/03 Young Fathers.pdf |
Abstract | The presence of fathers in children’s lives is known to contribute to children’s chances of experiencing positive developmental outcomes (Jaffee et al. 2001). Absent fathers result in poorer households (female-headed households are about a third poorer than maleheaded households) and a lack of positive role models for boys and girls regarding appropriate male–female interaction and shared parenting models. Sadly, South Africa has a high rate of absent fathers, with only one-third of preschool children living at home with both their parents (Statistics South Africa 2011). Reasons for father absenteeism include migrant labour, delayed marriage, gender-based violence and increasing female autonomy (Richter et al. 2012). The 2012 draft White Paper on Familiesraises concerns about South African families being ‘under siege’, and lists, among other threats to coherent family life, absent fathers and former spouses or partners who prevent fathers from playing a role in the lives of their children. |
» | South Africa - General Household Survey 2010 |