“…Often referred to in academic literature as “left‐behind” children, we advocate the term stay‐behind to avoid implying that parents have neglected or abandoned their children, and to emphasise the relatively sedentary circumstances of the children compared with their parents' mobility. The impacts of parental migration on stay‐behind children have received growing attention internationally (e.g., Coe, ; Dreby, ; Leinaweaver, ; Mazzucato & Cebotari, ), including in Asia and the Pacific region (e.g., Alipio, Lu, & Yeoh, ; Choi, Yeoh, & Lam, ; Graham & Jordan, ; Graham, Jordan, Yeoh, Lam, & Asis, ; Murphy, Zhou, & Tao, ; Toyota, Yeoh, & Nguyen, ). However, largely neglected by investigators are the strategic actions of parents around registering stay‐behind children in order to gain access to services and resources such as education, health care, or food subsidies.…”