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Kinship and belonging: Pacific children’s perspectives on the diaspora

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-22, 02:50 authored by Claire FreemanClaire Freeman, Anita Latai Niusulu, Michelle Schaaf, Tuiloma Susana Taua’a, Helen Tanielu, Christina Ergler, MaryJane Kivalu
Our study with 71 children aged 6-14 living in New Zealand and Samoa, provides a new child-centred perspective on transnational diasporic families. We use the Pacific concept vā to frame the study, in which children’s transnational-kinship connections reflect relational rather than physical approaches to space. Familial habitus surpasses spatial habitus as children’s primary reference point. For diasporic children, family keeps alive their sense of Pacific Island belonging. Transnational kinship ties give Pacific children additional resilience in adapting to unknown futures.

History

Preferred citation

Freeman, C., Latai Niusulu, A., Schaaf, M., Taua’a, T. S., Tanielu, H., Ergler, C. & Kivalu, M. (2022). Kinship and belonging: Pacific children’s perspectives on the diaspora. Childhood, 29(4), 612-627. https://doi.org/10.1177/09075682221121681

Journal title

Childhood

Volume

29

Issue

4

Publication date

2022-11-01

Pagination

612-627

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2022-09-28

ISSN

0907-5682

eISSN

1461-7013

Language

en