Type | Working Paper |
Title | Parenting, poverty and young people in South Africa: What are the connections? |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
URL | http://ci.org.za/depts/ci/pubs/pdf/general/gauge2015/Child_Gauge_2015-Parenting.pdf |
Abstract | This essay approaches “parenting” as the caring interactions between close adult kin and young people. The practices, ideas and connections that comprise parenting evolve over time because they are dependent on the well-being of parents, that of adolescents and the health of the relationship between them. In this essay, we explore these ideas with regard to the parenting of adolescents under the particular conditions present in South Africa. Children who have received appropriate nutrition from conception onwards, who are attached to their parents, and who have received cognitive stimulation and warm, positive parenting with consistent limit-setting, are more likely to succeed in their education; are more likely to be healthy as adults; and less likely to engage in risky sex, substance misuse and violent and criminal behaviour. These are strands that run throughout the span of child development, from conception to adulthood, but adolescence entails new contexts for parenting as young people expand their social networks, diversify their occupations and experience rapid brain development that changes the way they think and engage with the world.6 Positive relationships with role models, access to social networks and to cultural capital become increasingly important as young people tread the difficult path between their aspirations and local realities. Shifts from earlier forms of parenting may occur both in the activities of parenting and associated expectations of both adults and their older children. However the evidence suggests that parenting remains critical to young people’s sense of belonging, constructions of their sexuality,their interface with wider society and to their emotional and physical safety. |
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