Care and Connectivity in Labour Migration

Until quite recently notions of kinship have been treated as localized modes of social organization and classification systems. Moreover, as forms of  organization and as  ideational relational structures, kinship systems have been considered to exist outside colonial administrations and economies,...

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Main Authors: Esben Leifsen, Alexander Tymczuk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Suomen Antropologinen Seura (Finnish Anthropological Society) 2010-12-01
Series:Suomen Antropologi
Online Access:https://journal.fi/suomenantropologi/article/view/127518
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author Esben Leifsen
Alexander Tymczuk
author_facet Esben Leifsen
Alexander Tymczuk
author_sort Esben Leifsen
collection DOAJ
description Until quite recently notions of kinship have been treated as localized modes of social organization and classification systems. Moreover, as forms of  organization and as  ideational relational structures, kinship systems have been considered to exist outside colonial administrations and economies, nation states and the market. An early non-typical example going against this trend is Esther Goody’s study of fosterage practices among West-Africans in London. Her study is a prolongation of studies she carried out in Ghana on different types of institutionalized child-care arrangements which implied child circulation (Goody 1982). The study of fosterage, wardship and apprenticeship practices in West Africa has contributed to a newer research current which thematically links West Africa, the Pacific region, the Caribbean and parts of Latin America. Situations of multi-local families and kinship groups, relational and changeable socialities and the circulation of children have been shown by ethnographic accounts and social history studies to exist parallel and prior to the period when conditions of economic globalization turned transnational migration into a relevant research topic. Ethnographic insight from these studies can contribute to the study of kinship and the structuring of kinship relations in transnational contexts.  
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spelling doaj.art-c732123c37894f9fbc8ab1740126795a2023-03-05T16:12:39ZengSuomen Antropologinen Seura (Finnish Anthropological Society)Suomen Antropologi1799-89722010-12-01354Care and Connectivity in Labour MigrationEsben Leifsen0Alexander Tymczuk1University of Life SciencesUniversity of Oslo Until quite recently notions of kinship have been treated as localized modes of social organization and classification systems. Moreover, as forms of  organization and as  ideational relational structures, kinship systems have been considered to exist outside colonial administrations and economies, nation states and the market. An early non-typical example going against this trend is Esther Goody’s study of fosterage practices among West-Africans in London. Her study is a prolongation of studies she carried out in Ghana on different types of institutionalized child-care arrangements which implied child circulation (Goody 1982). The study of fosterage, wardship and apprenticeship practices in West Africa has contributed to a newer research current which thematically links West Africa, the Pacific region, the Caribbean and parts of Latin America. Situations of multi-local families and kinship groups, relational and changeable socialities and the circulation of children have been shown by ethnographic accounts and social history studies to exist parallel and prior to the period when conditions of economic globalization turned transnational migration into a relevant research topic. Ethnographic insight from these studies can contribute to the study of kinship and the structuring of kinship relations in transnational contexts.   https://journal.fi/suomenantropologi/article/view/127518
spellingShingle Esben Leifsen
Alexander Tymczuk
Care and Connectivity in Labour Migration
Suomen Antropologi
title Care and Connectivity in Labour Migration
title_full Care and Connectivity in Labour Migration
title_fullStr Care and Connectivity in Labour Migration
title_full_unstemmed Care and Connectivity in Labour Migration
title_short Care and Connectivity in Labour Migration
title_sort care and connectivity in labour migration
url https://journal.fi/suomenantropologi/article/view/127518
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