Research Article
Rural parents with urban children: social and economic implications of migration for the rural elderly in Thailand
Article first published online: 7 DEC 2006
DOI: 10.1002/psp.436
Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Issue
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Population, Space and Place
Special Issue: Migration and the ‘left behind’ in Asia; Guest Editor: Dr Mika Toyota, Asia Research Institute, Singapore
Volume 13, Issue 3, pages 193–210, May/June 2007
Additional Information
How to Cite
Knodel, J. and Saengtienchai, C. (2007), Rural parents with urban children: social and economic implications of migration for the rural elderly in Thailand. Population, Space and Place, 13: 193–210. doi: 10.1002/psp.436
Publication History
- Issue published online: 2 APR 2007
- Article first published online: 7 DEC 2006
- Abstract
- References
- Cited By
Keywords:
- migration;
- Thailand;
- older persons;
- ageing;
- elderly;
- modified extended family
Abstract
The present study explores the social and economic consequences of the migration of adult children to urban areas for rural parents in Thailand. Attention is given to the circumstances under which such migration takes place, including the role parents play in the process and the extent to which the implications of migration for the parents are taken into consideration. The analysis relies primarily on open-ended interviews conducted in 2004 with older age parents with migrant children in four purposely selected rural communities that were studied ten years earlier. Our findings suggest that migration of children to urban areas contributes positively to the material well-being of their elderly parents who remain in rural areas. Negative impacts of migration on social support, defined in terms of maintaining contact and visits, have been attenuated by the advent of technological changes in communication and also by improvements in transportation. Phone contact, especially through mobile phones, is now pervasive, in sharp contrast to the situation ten years earlier when it was extremely rare. Much of the change in Thailand in terms of the relationships between rural parents and their geographically dispersed adult children is quite consistent with the concept of the ‘modified extended family’, a perspective that has become common in discussions regarding elderly parents in industrial and post-industrial societies but rarely applied to the situation of elderly parents in developing country settings. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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