“It’s for Our Education”: Perception of Parental Migration and Resilience Among Left-behind Children in Rural China

被引:0
|
作者
Shu Hu
机构
[1] National University of Singapore,Asia Research Institute and Center for Population and Family Research
来源
Social Indicators Research | 2019年 / 145卷
关键词
China; Parental migration; Left-behind children; Education; Resilience; Wellbeing; Mixed methods;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
As a result of China’s rural–urban bifurcation, millions of rural Chinese children grow up in the absence of one or both parents due to work migration. Contrary to the dismal picture of left-behind children that is depicted by the mass media, comparative studies based on large-scale survey data suggest that left-behind children do not fare worse than those who live with both parents. Researchers have suggested that the positive effects of remittance might outweigh the negative effects of parental absence, and this explains why there is little total effect of parental migration on children’s wellbeing. This, however, does not explain why left-behind children are doing equally well as non-left-behind children in nearly all aspects of life, some of which are affected more by parental care than by economic resources. This paper aims to explore what factors contribute to the all-round resilience of rural left-behind adolescents. Mixed methods were used to collect both quantitative and qualitative data from adolescents, caregivers, and school teachers from a migrant-sending community in central China. Data analyses reveal that adolescent interpretation of parental migration is deeply embedded in Chinese values on education and ideals of mutual responsibilities among family members, and that a positive understanding of parental motivation for labor migration and commitment to education are significant contributors to the resilience displayed by left-behind adolescents. The heterogeneities in the reaction of left-behind adolescents to parental migration demonstrate that the positive perception of parental migration is not a stand-alone protective factor.
引用
收藏
页码:641 / 661
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Parental Migration and Education of Left-Behind Children: A Comparison of Two Settings
    Lu, Yao
    JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY, 2014, 76 (05) : 1082 - 1098
  • [32] Parental migration and care for left-behind children in Myanmar's Dry Zone
    Teerawichitchainan, Bussarawan
    Knodel, John
    JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ISSUES, 2022, 78 (03) : 502 - 520
  • [33] Depression among left-behind children in China
    Liang, Ying
    Wang, Lei
    Rui, Guoqiang
    JOURNAL OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2017, 22 (14) : 1897 - 1905
  • [34] Mental health among left-behind children in Vietnam: Role of resilience
    Dat Ba Nguyen
    Luot Van Nguyen
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH, 2022,
  • [35] Alone and "left behind": a case study of "left-behind children" in rural China
    Hong, Yang
    Fuller, Carol
    COGENT EDUCATION, 2019, 6 (01):
  • [36] 'Save the children!': Governing left-behind children through family in China's Great Migration
    Gu, Xiaorong
    CURRENT SOCIOLOGY, 2022, 70 (04) : 513 - 538
  • [37] Resilience of college students with rural left-behind experience in China: a qualitative study
    Du, Xi
    CHINA JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK, 2022, 15 (02) : 178 - 192
  • [38] Parental migration, sibling migration, and the educational outcomes of children left behind in rural China
    Qiu, Hui
    Liang, Xiao
    Sun, Dan
    CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES REVIEW, 2024, 157
  • [39] The Effects of Organizational Social Support on Left-behind Children's Resilience in China
    Liang, Jiachun
    Hamidi, Mashitah
    Abd Wahab, Haris
    Ong, Siew Kian
    JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SERVICE RESEARCH, 2023, 49 (05) : 635 - 652
  • [40] Parental migration and the educational enrolment of left-behind children: evidence from rural Ponorogo, Indonesia
    Arlini, Silvia Mila
    Yeoh, Brenda S. A.
    Yen, Khoo Choon
    Graham, Elspeth
    ASIAN POPULATION STUDIES, 2019, 15 (02) : 190 - 208