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How left behind are rural parents of migrant children?
 — Evidence from Thailand
Author(s)John Knodel, Jiraporn Kespichayawattana, Chanpen Saengtienchai
Journal titleAgeing and Society, vol 30, part 5, July 2010
Pagespp 811-841
Sourcehttp://www.journals.cambridge.org/aso doi:10.1017/S0144686X09990699
KeywordsMigration ; Children [offspring] ; Family relationships ; Attitude ; Parents ; Rural areas ; Social surveys ; Thailand.
AnnotationThe consequences of adult children's migration from rural areas for older parents who remain behind are keenly debated. While the mass media and international advocacy organisations favour an 'alarmist' view of desertion, the academic literature makes more sanguine assessments using the 'household strategy' and 'modified extended family' perspectives. The authors examine the relationship between the migration of adult children and various dimensions of older parents' well-being in Thailand using evidence from a survey that focused on the issues. The results provide little support for the alarmist view, but instead suggest that parents and adult children adapt to the social and economic changes associated with development in ways not necessarily detrimental to intergenerational relations. The migration of children, especially to urban areas, often benefits parents' material support while the recent spread of cell phones has radically increased their ability to maintain social contact. Nevertheless, changing living arrangements through increased migration and the smaller family sizes of the youngest age groups of older people pose serious challenges for aspects of filial support, especially at advanced ages when chronic illness and frailty require long-term personal care. Dealing with this emerging situation in a context of social, economic and technological change is among the most critical issues facing those concerned with the implications of rapid population ageing in Thailand and elsewhere. (KJ/RH).
Accession NumberCPA-100719204 A
ClassmarkTN: SS: DS:SJ: DP: SR: RL: 3F: 7HG

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