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Journal article

Serial Migration and Its Implications for the Parent-Child Relationship: A Retrospective Analysis of the Experiences of the Children of Caribbean Immigrants

Date

2004

Authors

Richard N. Lalonde, Andrea Smith, and Simone Johnson

Abstract

This study addressed the potential impact of serial migration for parent-children relationships and for children's psychological well-being. The experience of being separated from their parents during childhood and reunited with them at a later time was retrospectively examined for 48 individuals. A series of measures (e.g., self-esteem, parental identification) associated with appraisals at critical time periods during serial migration (separation, reunion, current) revealed that serial migration can potentially disrupt parent-child bonding and unfavorably affect children's self-esteem and behavior. Time did not appear to be wholly effective in repairing rifts in the parent-child relationship. Risk factors for less successful reunions included lengthy separations and the addition of new members to the family unit in the child's absence.

Journal title

Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology

Volume

10

Issue

2

Page numbers

107-122

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Economic sectors

Agriculture and horticulture workers

Geographical focuses

Regional relevance and National relevance

Spheres of activity

Psychology

Languages

English