2017
DOI: 10.1080/17441730.2017.1303110
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‘The house cannot stay empty’: a case of young rural Nepalis negotiating multilocal householding

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Cited by 13 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Communication from emigrant men and their siblings enquiring about the older adults were valued by the caregiver and daughter-in-law caregivers who perceived them as supportive to their otherwise unsupported role. We find glimpses of how siblings negotiate their roles as movers and stayers in relation to household obligations, individual aspirations and shifting socio-economic opportunities to be available in the household for their parents (Korzenevica & Agergaard, 2017). Reciprocal support exchanges from their care recipients such as sharing in household chores, errands, assisting in cooking and childcare had provided caregivers respite and time to attend to other matters, thus helping alleviate feelings of burden (Keefe & Fancey, 2002;Reid et al, 2005).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Communication from emigrant men and their siblings enquiring about the older adults were valued by the caregiver and daughter-in-law caregivers who perceived them as supportive to their otherwise unsupported role. We find glimpses of how siblings negotiate their roles as movers and stayers in relation to household obligations, individual aspirations and shifting socio-economic opportunities to be available in the household for their parents (Korzenevica & Agergaard, 2017). Reciprocal support exchanges from their care recipients such as sharing in household chores, errands, assisting in cooking and childcare had provided caregivers respite and time to attend to other matters, thus helping alleviate feelings of burden (Keefe & Fancey, 2002;Reid et al, 2005).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fieldwork by Ensor et al [70] in the Kaski and Chitwan districts of Nepal realized that respondents rarely referred to weather or climate as significant issues affecting livelihoods, and, although many aspects of social and livelihood change were discussed, no respondents attributed these to climate change (interviewed in December 2015) [70]. Major reasons of ongoing abandonment of rural land are rather lack of adequate labor and wages available for agricultural work, the effects of rising education in households, burgeoning mechanization, and high levels of migration into the urban or global labor and educational market [70,71]. Although migration is by no means a new phenomenon in this region, the scale of migration has changed radically in recent years.…”
Section: Seeing Beyond Climate Impacts-a Case Study From Kaski and Chmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Much international migration can be understood as part of a livelihood diversification strategy that eventually results in the return of the migrant to his or her home country (De Haan, ; Greiner, ; Scoones, ). International migration will often be predated by internal migration either by the migrant or relatives to accumulate funds for moving abroad and/or the acquisition of necessary skills (Korzenevica & Agergaard, ). In addition, migrants' return to their home country is part of a multifaceted set of relocations: Migrants often prefer to return to urban areas rather than to the rural areas from which they departed—what has been referred to as a J‐turn (Wiltshire, ).…”
Section: Conceptualising the Migration–urbanisation Nexusmentioning
confidence: 99%