Parenting in place: Young children's living arrangement and migrants' sleep health in South Africa

Author:

Madhavan Sangeetha1ORCID,Kim Seung Wan2,White Michael3,Gomez‐Olive Xavier4

Affiliation:

1. Departments of African American Studies and Sociology University of Maryland College Park Maryland USA

2. Department of Sociology University of Maryland College Park Maryland USA

3. Population Studies and Training Center Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

4. MRC/Wits Rural Public Health and Health Transitions Research Unit (Agincourt), School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg South Africa

Abstract

AbstractMigration research tends to treat childrearing as a secondary role for migrants. By prioritising the economic objectives of migration, most models present migrants as either delaying childbearing or, if they have young children, not living with them. However, migration has become increasingly feminised, the types of mobility more varied, while the returns to migration remain uncertain at best. At the same time, norms around childrearing are shifting, and the capacity of kin to take care of children may be weakening. In such contexts, migrants may not want to or be able to be separated from their children. Confronting such difficult decisions and their consequences may be reflected in poor sleep health for the migrant parent. We draw on data from the Migration and Health Follow‐Up Study (MHFUS) in South Africa to examine the following questions: (i) To what extent is children's coresidence associated with sleep health for migrant parents? (ii) Do effects vary by sex of migrant? and (iii) Do effects vary by location of migrant? Results from propensity score matching confirm that migrants who coreside with all their young children are more likely to experience healthy sleep compared to those who have nonresident or no young children. However, stratified analysis shows that these effects are only significant for women and those not living in Gauteng province. The value of these findings is underscored by the need for research on the well‐being of migrant parents who are negotiating multiple agendas in economically precarious and physically insecure destinations.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Geography, Planning and Development,Demography

Reference84 articles.

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