Picking Up the Pieces: Examining the Long Term Effects of Family Separation on Pinay Migrant Mothers and Adult Daughters
- Date
2008
- Auteurs
Conely De Leon
- Résumé
The Philippines is considered one of the largest organized exporters of human labour in the world. Currently, the outflow of migrant workers from the Philippines to over 190 countries across the globe has left over nine million children without parents. This means that over nine million children have personally experienced the trauma of family separation. To understand the devastating long-term consequences of separation on Filipino families, I take as my case study three Pinay mothers who have migrated to Canada under the Foreign Domestic Movement and their adult daughters. The key purpose of this thesis is to open up a deeper discussion around family separation and reunification amongst Pinays who have settled in Canada. It is intended to push the boundaries of what we may already know or think we know about Filipina women in Canada, thereby establishing a more nuanced and heterogeneous understanding of Pinay lives.
- Université
University of Toronto
- Département académique
Social Sciences
- Lieu de publication
Ottawa
- Liens
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Picking up the pieces examining the long term effects of family separation on Pinay migrant mothers and adult daughters (http://books.google.com/books/about/Picking_up_the_pieces_Examining_the_long.html?id=s1Mu5QaGLoUC)
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- Secteurs économiques
Occupations in services - Domestic work, Sales and service occupations - general et Home support workers, housekeepers and related occupations
- Types de contenu
Policy analysis et Statistics on work and life conditions
- Groupes cibles
Chercheurs
- Pertinence géographique
Quebec, Philippines et National relevance
- Sphères d’activité
Psychologie et Socioligie
- Langues
Anglais