Growing Up with Distant Parents: Socialization and Alienation of “Left-Behind” Children in Rural China

ZHANG Donghui

PDF(264 KB)
PDF(264 KB)
Front. Educ. China ›› 2015, Vol. 10 ›› Issue (4) : 505-525. DOI: 10. 3868/s110-004-015-0038-3
Research article
Research article

Growing Up with Distant Parents: Socialization and Alienation of “Left-Behind” Children in Rural China

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Abstract

An increasing number of left-behind children has emerged in rural China as a result of the large-scale migration of rural farmers to urban cities since the 1990s. With the absence of parent(s) from the family, the left-behind children face crises in socialization and their relationships with their parents are threatened by physical distance. This paper investigates how Chinese left-behind children negotiate the missing roles of parents and how the parent-child relations in such families change over time, through in-depth case studies of two left-behind children with different family backgrounds in rural Henan province.

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left-behind children / rural China / parent-child relations / socialization

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ZHANG Donghui. Growing Up with Distant Parents: Socialization and Alienation of “Left-Behind” Children in Rural China. Front. Educ. China, 2015, 10(4): 505‒525 https://doi.org/10. 3868/s110-004-015-0038-3

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2014 Higher Education Press and Brill
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