ETD Collection

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://wiredspace.wits.ac.za/handle/10539/104


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  • Item
    Economic studies of motherhood and childcare in South Africa
    (2018) Hatch, Michelle
    In this thesis, I examine the relationships between motherhood and childcare, and women’s wellbeing and economic status. South Africa is a particularly interesting country in which to explore these relationships given diverse family forms, a long history of labour migration and very low marriage rates particularly among African women. In the first empirical study (Chapter Two), I analyse the gender division of labour in physical and financial (paying for educational expenses) childcare. I show that women are more likely to be physical caregivers than men are financial caregivers. In South Africa, mothers are not always caregivers for their children and in African households, where mothers are more likely to be absent from the household, other women provide both physical and financial care to children. In the second study (Chapter Three), I explore the relationship among women, between their subjective wellbeing (SWB) and living with children. I examine if the nature of women’s caregiver status moderates this relationship, and whether caregiving itself is significantly associated with SWB. The results suggest that, in contrast to African women, motherhood and childcare is a less positive experience for non-African women. For African women, on average there is a positive association between physically caring for children (provided they receive help), and paying for the schooling of children. The positive relationship between physical care and SWB is stronger when women are looking after their own children. For non-African women, however, physical and financial care are negatively related to SWB with little difference between own and other children (which is not surprising given that relatively few non-African women are primary caregivers of other people’s children). In the final study (Chapter Four), I compare the economic status of mothers by their marital status and investigate the relationship between physical childcare and employment. I show that single mothers, on average, are economically disadvantaged compared to mothers who are married or cohabiting. Furthermore, there is a stronger negative association between providing primary physical care to children and being employed among single mothers. This is partly explained by single mothers who live away from their children being significantly less likely to be caregivers and more likely to be employed. Unlike married or cohabiting mothers, single mothers also do not receive more assistance with childcare when they transition into employment.
  • Item
    Children’s spatial mobility and household transitions: a study of child mobility and care arrangements in the context of maternal migration
    (2017) Hall, Katharine Jane
    South Africa has uniquely high rates of parental absence from children’s lives. Apartheid-era restrictions on population movement and residential arrangements contributed to family fragmentation, particularly when adults – mainly men – migrated to work in cities and on the mines. Despite the removal of legal impediments to permanent urban settlement and family coresidence for Africans, patterns of internal and oscillating labour migration have endured, dual or stretched households continue to link urban and rural nodes, and children have remained less urbanised than adults. Importantly for children, migration rates among prime-age women have increased, alongside falling marriage rates, declining remittances and persistently high unemployment. Households, and women especially, may have to make difficult choices about how to manage the competing demands of child care and income generation. It is the mobility patterns and household configurations arising from these strategies that are the focus of this research. The thesis uses a mixed-method approach to explore children’s geographic mobility and care arrangements. Using micro data spanning two decades, it traces children’s co-residence arrangements with parents and describes changes in household form from the perspective of children. It maps recent patterns of child migration within South Africa using four waves of a national panel study and compares these with patterns of maternal migration to reveal various dynamics of migration in mother–child dyads: co-migration, sequential migration, independent migration, and immobility. The child-focused analysis augments the existing migration literature, which has tended to focus on adult labour migration and ignore children or regard them as appendages of migrants. A single, detailed case study spanning three generations of mothers adds texture to the analysis by demonstrating the complexity of household strategies and plans for child care in the context of female labour migration. This in turn helps to reflect on the value of micro data for describing and analysing household form and migration patterns, particularly among children.