Migracióny Familias JF Emergentes - Problemas y Desafíos
Migracióny Familias JF Emergentes - Problemas y Desafíos
Migracióny Familias JF Emergentes - Problemas y Desafíos
Madhu Nagla
Maharshi Dayanand University, India
Abstract
The rapid economic and social changes that swept through the last few decades
had altered the family system. Incidences of migration have increased many folds.
What is interesting is that in the situation of migration, the patriarchal family in
a short time period becomes a matrilocal family. The woman-head decides the
day-to-day matters and sometimes crucial matters. The empowerment of women is
a new phenomenon which requires an exploration. The major thrust of the
proposed inquiry is to make an intensive and depth study of the female headed
household at city level. What is important is to see how women perform this new
responsibility. The study of family will analyze the nature and extent of
transformation among women headed households. It will be able to penetrate to
what extent the functions, role, authority and status of women undergo change in
the new phenomenon of absentee head of the family.
An exploratory study was designed to generate data from the selected
respondents. The instrument used for data collection was a structured scheduled
interview seeking information concerning the socio-economic background of female
headed families, decision to migrate, daily life in a migrant household, intra and
inter-household relationship, changes in gender roles and power relations within the
household, management and investment of remittances, impact of migration on the
wives participation in the labour market are included. The women, who are part
of the female headed household got confidence and tended to get more
decision-making powers and of course not passing through the economic crisis.
Key words
India, family, women headed families, migration
Introduction
In common English speech, its meaning can range over the members
of a household (that is those who live together under the same roof),
those who feel strong bonds of obligation to one another by virtue of
close kinship (even if they do not live together), those who claim descent
from a common ancestor (for instance ‘of good family’) and finally all
Asian Women 2008 Vol.24 No.1 ❙ 3
The family can be categorized under the following heads: (1) Joint
family; (2) Nuclear family; (3) Single parent family; (4) Women headed
family.
In the joint family, all family members including brothers, sisters,
cousins and remotely related persons lived under the care of head. All
individuals get protection and security from the head, which controls
lives, actions and emotions. The family provides social security to its
members, sheltering widows, and to the infirm. The nuclear family is
composed of husband, wife and their unmarried children. Single parent
families are those families in which children either stay or are cared by
mother or father. A woman headed household is one in which the women
is the head, i.e., she is the manager, provider and decision maker in the
household (Vardhan, 1990). According to Ranjana (1989), “A female
headed household is one in which the female is the major provider and
/or protector, carrier, bearer and decision maker in the household.
Since independence, the position of women in the family has been
changing and gradually a significant transformation comes about in the
status of women. They are not only accepted as equal partners in family
but are also assuming hardship in the household although the number
of such cases is quite limited. Their position as head of the household
certainly represents a change in their status. This change is a result of
the processes of industrialization, urbanization where in (a) because of
poverty and unemployment; men folk are compelled to move out of their
ancestral homes leaving behind their families at their native places; and
(b) the traditional joint family system is changing and emerging nuclear
families in which in case of any absence of male due to death, desertion
or divorce, the responsibility to run the household family is on women.
This is giving rise to new situations in which women have to cater to
the responsibilities of the household on their own while facing stiff
opposition and odd situations from other quarters (Vardhan, 1995).
All these female headed households have enormous social, cultural and
economic implications, because it is disturbing the social fabric of the
society. At the social level again women’s reform movements have given
further impetus to such changes. A female headed household denotes a
position in which woman is the head of the household. The concept of
female headed household was originated rather recently. It was identified
and defined for the first time during the 1970s when women researches
noticed a large percentage of rural adult women living below the poverty
Asian Women 2008 Vol.24 No.1 ❙ 5
line and in poorer conditions than their male counterparts across the
globe. They pointed out that the incidence of female-headed household
was growing particularly in developed countries (Youseff & Hetler, 1983).
Chatterjee (1988) pointed out that the incidence of female headed
household was growing in India too. Since 1961, the Government of
India has been enumerating female headed household in the Census. Till
then this had remained unrecorded. The 1981 Census estimated about 10
percent of total households by sex in the total population for the first
time.
Today, in India, where an increasing number of women across the
board, have taken up a job of work by need or choice, the overriding
issue remains to be that of time. With women joining the work force,
there seems to be twice as much to get done within twenty four hours
that were adequate when they stayed at home. With families being hit
by a “speed-up” it is mostly the woman, for whatever reason, who has
had to absorb this change of pace.
It would be simplistic to say that it is India’s social mores, even in
its urban, westernized corners which are not conductive to women
splitting their time between home and office. Several surveys conducted
in the west also prove that even in the most liberated societies a woman’s
work is never done. Besides the time factor, the issue uniting working
mothers in the world over is the interminable guilt trip they are on.
Guilty at work when she neglects to meet the demands on her time as
a mother is guilt at home, as she does not spend enough time with
children and family. The clinched business of spending ‘quality of time’
is a brave front, for how much quality time is really available, when there
are a million household chores to catch up on?
Transformation in the urban families has also brought many changes.
Technological and economic changes which have replaced established
family values with confusion about the nature of parenting and the role
of spouses. Enhanced earning power combined with a consumer culture
has affected the lives of parents and children, altering their attitudes to
family life which, in many ways lead to the weakening and even breaking
of family bonds, which has added to the emergence of female headed
families.
6 ❙ Madhu Nagla
Review of Literature
in most cases the wife of the migrant, shoulder the major responsibility
of taking care of the children. They manage the several minor and some
major crisis in the family, sometimes single-handedly. In the absence of
males, women have control over what they earn in kind, but it is
doubtful that they gain any substantial power in the family. More often
it is the male who decides the expenditure on different items.
Findings
In our study all the respondents who were interviewed in Rohtak city
had put out migration as the major reason for female headship as their
husbands had either gone for army service, air force, navy or services in
other sectors. Caste-wise, the incidence of female-headedness was more
among the jats (85.70 percent) and the rest were from yadav caste. All
the women were in the 25 to 45 age range. Most of the women i.e.,
14 (40.00 percent) were in the middle age-group of 36-40 years. It
means they already had an experience of living alone without their
husbands for a long period. Sixteen (45.71 percent) had their birth place
14 ❙ Madhu Nagla
Table1. Socio-Economic Profile of the Women who are Heading the Family
Monthly Number
Occupation Income of Family Family Education Birth Place Age-Group
(in years)
Members
Housewife Rs.10,000 2-3 Nuclear Higher Rural 25-30
5 (14.28) -20,000 24 (68.58) 29 (82.86) Secondary 16 (45.71) 6 (17.14)
6 (17.14) 4 (11.42)
Stitching Rs.20,100 4-5 Joint Graduation Urban 31-35
& tutoring -30,000 9 (25.71) 6 (17.14) 5 (14.28) 19 (54.29) 11 (31.44)
at home 15 (42.86)
9 (25.72)
Teaching in Rs.30,100 More than Post 36-40
school/college -40,000 52 (5.71) -graduation 14 (40.00)
13 (37.15) 14 (40.00) 17 (48.58)
Clerical Professional 41-45
& related qualification 4 (11.42)
work 9 (25.72)
8 (22.85)
35 35 35 35 35 35 Total
(100.00) (100.00) (100.00) (100.00) (100.00) (100.00) 35(100.00)
Asian Women 2008 Vol.24 No.1 ❙ 15
The large scale migration of labour from rural and tribal areas to
towns and cities has been characterized by the predominance of unskilled
and semi-skilled male workers accompanied by their families. Migration
of male is due to the cost of moving the family. To take the family
would defeat the purpose of migration which is often adopted as a
short-term strategy to generate more cash and improve a household’s
standard of living.
As a result, many families have been transformed temporarily into de
facto female headed households. This has resulted into its implications on
women and children. Migration often leads to the nuclearization of family
and greater decision-making powers for the wife, usually at the
mother-in-law’s expense. Other questions such as whether wives acquire
greater power vis-à-vis their husbands or within the wider community,
and more importantly, whether the charges would be permanent in
nature, have remained much more controversial.
Decision to Migrate
wives with no children often live with their in-laws. But all the wives
argued that it is unpleasant to live with them because it took away from
them the autonomy that marriage has afforded them. However, as soon
as a woman starts having children, and they become of school going age,
she shifts along with her children in her own residence. In our sample,
five women stayed with their in-laws despite their unwillingness, one
moved to her parent’s house and 29 live in their own independent
households.
Intra-household Relationships
and their children. However, some of our informants pointed out that
their husband’s absence had little effect on their children’s upbringing
since the role of father, beyond an economic one, was minimum.
We did not find any evidence that children in migrant households
were given more work and responsibilities than children in other
households. However, girls in migrants’ households differed from other
girls. The migrants’ families girls are being given more decision-making
powers over daily routine, in being closer to their others, and perhaps in
being rewarded more often with little presents.
None of the children from the migrant’s families expressed hostility
towards their fathers’ absence. Children often expressed hostility towards
their fathers’ absence. Children often explained with much enthusiasm
that their fathers had migrated in order to provide them a better life.
Children often praised their fathers publicly for enduring hardship and
separation in order to give them a better a future.
Inter-household Relationships
The help and support that neighbours, kins, and community provide
one another, both on a daily basis and at times of crisis, is significant.
Much of the interaction between women takes place in the absence of
their husbands. Migrants’ wives had freer schedules for socializing and
their homes provided a more suitable centre for women to assemble to
perform collective activities such as sewing, banking, tutoring, or simply
watching television. Most wives viewed their acquired freedom as
compensation for their loneliness.
Similarly, the interaction of wives with their own kin intensified when
they lived in closed proximity. They often developed clear ties and
exchanged services much more readily with their mothers or sisters and
sometimes their brothers. This stood in sharp contrast to domination or
relations with the husbands’ kin. Often there was almost a deliberate
tendency for migrants’ wives to publicize their differences with husbands’
kin, to air complaints of lack of support. Many of the migrants’ wives
adopted strategies that alienated the husbands’ families. This is because
customarily the immediate members of a husbands’ family of origin can
raise a claim to his earnings, particularly if they are poorer than he. In
return, they are expected to provide help and assistance as needed.
18 ❙ Madhu Nagla
Except of the old, infirm or the very rich, all women work. Most of
the work women do, however, goes unrecorded and unnoticed. This is
because in developing countries women are engaged in subsistence
activities, the products of which are not for profit, sale or exchange in
the market and, therefore, are not considered economically productive.
The activities are food processing, dairying, poultry rearing and the
husking of grains and they are not counted as work by census definition.
The collection of fuel, fodder and water, cooking, washing and cleaning;
Asian Women 2008 Vol.24 No.1 ❙ 19
child bearing and child rearing are excluded from the category of
economically productive work. Thus, women’s work remains largely
invisible. In our study since women are heading the families and able to
work to take their own decisions for their employment or work to earn
money, they choose their work voluntarily. In our sample 9 (25.72
percent) who were driven to the necessity of eking out a living and had
some knowledge about the employment market had either taken up
decent jobs or even sitting at home were engaged in tutoring or stitching
clothes and earning good amounts of money. Thirteen (37.16 percent)
women were engaged in school or college teaching and they reported
that school/college teaching is best for women headed families as they
had to be in schools or colleges for not more than six hours and the
remaining time can be spent with children and other outdoor activities.
Eight (22.85 percent) women were engaged in some clerical related work,
which has long duty hours but working place is within vicinity, therefore
commutation time is saved. All the women were happy with their outside
work. They said that this serves a dual purpose of supplementing family
income and also to provide creative outlets for the expanding aspiration
of women. Since the husband has gone out and she is not staying with
in-laws, therefore she also has the work autonomy and economic
autonomy.
Conclusion
References