Husband immobility and the international migration of married women from Zimbabwe
Author(s)
Madebwe, CrescentiaContributor(s)
Gelderblom, D.Keywords
International migrationHusband immobility
Wifely migration
Migrant women
Remittances
Decision making
Family
Marriage
Networks
Gender relations
Empowerment
Economic crisis
Migration theories
Diaspora
Culture
Norms
Gweru, Zimbabwe
306.81096891
Working mothers -- Employment -- Zimbabwe -- Gweru -- Psychological aspects
Married women -- Employment -- Zimbabwe -- Gweru -- Psychological aspects
Work and family -- Zimbabwe -- Gweru
Expatriation -- Zimbabwe -- Gweru -- Psychological aspects
Forced migration -- Zimbabwe -- Gweru -- Psychological aspects
Emigration and immigration -- Zimbabwe -- Gweru -- Psychological aspects
Wives -- Effect of husband's employment on -- Zimbabwe -- Gweru
Married women -- Zimbabwe -- Gweru -- Economic conditions
Emigration and immigration -- Zimbabwe -- Gweru -- Social aspects
Gweru (Zimbabwe) -- Emigration and immigration
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http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18571Abstract
This thesis examined husband immobility and the international migration of married women from Zimbabwe. Data was collected from husbands and wives in married couple households where the wife had migrated alone. Face-to-face semi structured interviews were conducted with migrant women’s husbands in Zimbabwe while migrant women were interviewed in countries of destination telephonically. Empirical results showed that migrant women and their husbands were middle aged. Preferred countries of destination were in the region and the United Kingdom. Having a wife’s own social contacts in the preferred destination encouraged migration by reducing financial and emotional costs. Husbands' immobility facilitated wifely migration. Many wives exercised agency in migration decision making with more wives than husbands having initiated the discussion on migration. There were also cases of joint and wife sole decision making. With a few exceptions decision making was consensual. The women migrated as a survival strategy. In several households remittances were the primary source of income. Husbands were the main recipients of remittances. Some wives gave instructions on how the remittances should be used. Overall, remittances were used for paying fees, buying assets and for household upkeep. Some of the women had not visited their families since their migration. The physical separation of spouses had caused emotional distress in some marital relationships. The majority of respondents cited loss of consortium as a major problem.Sociology
D. Phil.
Date
2015-05-07Type
ThesisIdentifier
oai:uir.unisa.ac.za:10500/18571Madebwe, Crescentia (2014) Husband immobility and the international migration of married women from Zimbabwe, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18571>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18571
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