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
- File Attachments
- Links
- Economic sectors
Agriculture and horticulture workers
- Geographical focuses
Regional relevance and National relevance
- Spheres of activity
Psychology
- Languages
English