Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/576
Title: Enabling households to support successful migration of AIDS orphans in southern Africa
Authors: Ansell, N
Young, L
Keywords: Geography;AIDS;Children;Migration;Households;Policy;Xouthern Africa
Issue Date: 2004
Publisher: Routledge
Citation: AIDS Care 16(1): 3-10
Abstract: Most southern African orphans are cared for by extended families but the implications of the spatial dispersal of such families are seldom recognised: orphans often have to migrate to new homes and communities. This paper, based on qualitative research conducted with children and guardians in urban and rural Lesotho and Malawi, examines orphans' migration experiences in order to assess how successful migration might best be supported. Most children found migration traumatic in the short term, but over time many settled into new environments. Although much AIDS policy in southern Africa stresses the role of communities, the burden of care lay with extended family households. Failed migrations, which resulted in renewed migration and trauma, were attributable to one of two household-level causes: orphans feeling ill-treated in their new families or changes in guardians' circumstances. Policy interventions to reduce disruption and trauma for young AIDS migrants should aim at facilitating sustainable arrangements by enabling suitable households to provide care. Reducing the economic costs of caring for children, particularly school-related costs, would: allow children to stay with those relatives (e.g. grandparents) best able to meet their non-material needs; reduce resentment of foster children in impoverished households; and diminish the need for multiple migrations.
URI: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/576
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09540120310001633921
Appears in Collections:Human Geography
Sociology
Dept of Education Research Papers

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