Family Life in Transition
Borders, Transnational Mobility, and Welfare Society in Nordic Countries
- 202 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Family Life in Transition
Borders, Transnational Mobility, and Welfare Society in Nordic Countries
About This Book
This volume examines the ways in which bordering practices influence the everyday lives of racialized parents in the changing welfare states of Finland, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. Focusing on the need to negotiate, adjust, and reconcile family life, parenthood and parenting practices in the face of national, material, ideological, cultural, religious, and moral borders, it considers the manner in which these processes are complicated by recent changes in the legitimation of Nordic welfare states. The case studies centre on migrant, refugee, and asylum seeker parents, as well as parents of the indigenous SĂĄmi communities. The book considers the ways in which the welfare state and its services construct borders of respectable parenthood, and examines the efforts on the part of racialized parents to negotiate such borders and organize their transnational everyday lives. Uncovering possibilities and obstacles that exist for families seeking to enact citizenship in the Nordic welfare states, Family Life in Transition will appeal to social scientists with interests in the sociology of the family, children, parenting, and the welfare state.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-Title
- Series
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: The changing welfare state
- 2 Decoupling spheres of belonging in the Nordic welfare states
- PART I Welfare state and services
- PART II Transnational families
- PART III Enacting citizenship and respectable parenthood
- Index