‘Migrant Carer- Wives’ – Between Transnational Marriages, Care Work for Older Husbands and Gendered Precarity
Migration is traditionally categorised into migration for work or family. However, utilising interviews with both immigrant families and publically employed care managers, this study documents the existence of a hybrid type, involving migrant wives who arrive to care for substantially older husbands...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Helsinki University Press
2022-06-01
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Series: | Nordic Journal of Migration Research |
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Online Access: | https://journal-njmr.org/articles/427 |
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author | Anika Liversage Abir Mohamad Ismail |
author_facet | Anika Liversage Abir Mohamad Ismail |
author_sort | Anika Liversage |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Migration is traditionally categorised into migration for work or family. However, utilising interviews with both immigrant families and publically employed care managers, this study documents the existence of a hybrid type, involving migrant wives who arrive to care for substantially older husbands – an arrangement about which Danish care managers use the term ‘fetched wives’. Register data also document that the relatively infrequent remarriages among older immigrants primarily involve men finding much younger wives abroad. We term some such women ‘migrant carer-wives’. From a marriage market perspective, the demand for such marriages indicates that care needs of the men involved are not presently met. For various reasons, including linguistic and cultural ones, such men cannot or will not rely on either state-sponsored eldercare or aid from adult children. Instead, they (or their children) seek wives abroad. Women who are virtually ‘unmarriable’ locally due to unfortunate circumstances may accept such ‘carer-wife’ marriage proposals. While these marriages may provide such women with a livelihood, they also lead to not only isolated and strenuous lives with many care duties but also a precarious dependency on the adult children of husbands, who do not necessarily regard their fathers’ new wives as kin. |
first_indexed | 2024-12-11T18:33:37Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-9f3ae43b7a19409fb4a96880c8a0d48c |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 1799-649X |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-12-11T18:33:37Z |
publishDate | 2022-06-01 |
publisher | Helsinki University Press |
record_format | Article |
series | Nordic Journal of Migration Research |
spelling | doaj.art-9f3ae43b7a19409fb4a96880c8a0d48c2022-12-22T00:54:51ZengHelsinki University PressNordic Journal of Migration Research1799-649X2022-06-0112210.33134/njmr.427397‘Migrant Carer- Wives’ – Between Transnational Marriages, Care Work for Older Husbands and Gendered PrecarityAnika Liversage0Abir Mohamad Ismail1VIVE - The Danish Center for Social Science ResearchDepartment of Anthropology, Aahus UniversityMigration is traditionally categorised into migration for work or family. However, utilising interviews with both immigrant families and publically employed care managers, this study documents the existence of a hybrid type, involving migrant wives who arrive to care for substantially older husbands – an arrangement about which Danish care managers use the term ‘fetched wives’. Register data also document that the relatively infrequent remarriages among older immigrants primarily involve men finding much younger wives abroad. We term some such women ‘migrant carer-wives’. From a marriage market perspective, the demand for such marriages indicates that care needs of the men involved are not presently met. For various reasons, including linguistic and cultural ones, such men cannot or will not rely on either state-sponsored eldercare or aid from adult children. Instead, they (or their children) seek wives abroad. Women who are virtually ‘unmarriable’ locally due to unfortunate circumstances may accept such ‘carer-wife’ marriage proposals. While these marriages may provide such women with a livelihood, they also lead to not only isolated and strenuous lives with many care duties but also a precarious dependency on the adult children of husbands, who do not necessarily regard their fathers’ new wives as kin.https://journal-njmr.org/articles/427marriage migrationolder immigrantscare workgenderprecarity |
spellingShingle | Anika Liversage Abir Mohamad Ismail ‘Migrant Carer- Wives’ – Between Transnational Marriages, Care Work for Older Husbands and Gendered Precarity Nordic Journal of Migration Research marriage migration older immigrants care work gender precarity |
title | ‘Migrant Carer- Wives’ – Between Transnational Marriages, Care Work for Older Husbands and Gendered Precarity |
title_full | ‘Migrant Carer- Wives’ – Between Transnational Marriages, Care Work for Older Husbands and Gendered Precarity |
title_fullStr | ‘Migrant Carer- Wives’ – Between Transnational Marriages, Care Work for Older Husbands and Gendered Precarity |
title_full_unstemmed | ‘Migrant Carer- Wives’ – Between Transnational Marriages, Care Work for Older Husbands and Gendered Precarity |
title_short | ‘Migrant Carer- Wives’ – Between Transnational Marriages, Care Work for Older Husbands and Gendered Precarity |
title_sort | migrant carer wives between transnational marriages care work for older husbands and gendered precarity |
topic | marriage migration older immigrants care work gender precarity |
url | https://journal-njmr.org/articles/427 |
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