INDONESIAN LABOR MIGRATION: SOCIAL COSTS TO THE LEFT- BEHINDS

Similar documents
Migration, Gender and the Family in Asia: Recent Trends and Emerging Issues

Table of Content. About CMIR 2. Background 2. About legal and paralegal support 3. Network Mobilization and coordination 4. Case handle by CMIR

Queens College, City University of New York Using a family perspective in policymaking

Abstract. Journal of Social Sciences Sri Lanka. BVN Wijewardhana and LMSN Kumari

Current Situation of Women in the Philippines

Winner or Losers Adjustment strategies of rural-to-urban migrants Case Study: Kamza Municipality, Albania

Impacts of international cruise ship employment for i-kiribati women

Section IV A Binational Look at Household Composition, Gender and Age Distribution, and Educational Experiences. Executive Summary:

UNHCR Refugee Status Determination ( RSD ) Self Help Kit for Asylum Seekers in Indonesia

Migrant childrens Rights in the context of Repatriation

International Migration and Gender Discrimination among Children Left Behind. Francisca M. Antman* University of Colorado at Boulder

CEDAW 52 nd Session (9-27 th July 2012) NGO Report

Gender, migration and well-being of the elderly in rural China

From the Factory with Love:

Interview with Jacques Bwira Hope Primary School Kampala, Uganda

Your graces, excellencies, reverend fathers, distinguished guests, brothers and sisters, staff and friends of Caritas

Vulnerability Assessment Framework

OFW NARRATIVES: PERCEPTIONS AND CONTEXTS IN THE LABOR MIGRATION EXPERIENCES OF SELECTED OFWS

Gender dimensions of care migration: Perspectives from Southeast Asia

Labour rights for migrant workers : A child rights perspective

Socio - Economic Impact of Remittance on Households in Lekhnath Municipality, Kaski, Nepal

THE EFFECTS OF PARENTAL MIGRATION ON CHILD EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES IN INDONESIA

Policy brief. Migration for Domestic Work in Ghana: Implications for Poverty Reduction. Briefing Paper No.4 October, 2015

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY STUDY ON THE IMPACT OF MIGRATION ON CHILDREN IN THE CAPITAL AND TARGET PROVINCES, CAMBODIA

REMITTANCES TO ETHIOPIA

Leaving work behind? The impact of emigration on female labour force participation in Morocco

Women s Migration Processes from Georgia

11. While all participants were forced into prostitution, some worked alongside women who were not forced into prostitution but were participating

Margarita Mooney Assistant Professor University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, NC

Determinants of International Migration in Egypt: Results of the 2013 Egypt-HIMS

Socio-Psychological Effects of Emigration on Left Behind Women in Buner, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan

Annual General Meeting. 17 April 2016 STATISTICS 2015

U.M. Dissanayake* and M.B. Sakalasooriya 1 INTRODUCTION

CAMEROON NW & SW CRISIS CARE EXPLORATORY MISSION REPORT. Sectors: Shelter, NFI, Food security, WASH, Health, Protection, Education

Financial literacy training is provided to equip migrant workers and their families with the skills and knowledge to manage

Title: Rapid Assessment of the social and poverty impacts of the economic crisis in Romania

Girls on the Move: Adolescent girls & migration in the developing world. Miriam Temin Mark R. Montgomery

Developing a Regional Core Set of Gender Statistics and Indicators in Asia and the Pacific

Eastern European Young People in Brexit Britain:

UNHCR Refugee Status Determination ( RSD ) Self Help Kit for Asylum Seekers in Indonesia

Coordination of Afghan Relief (CoAR) Needs Assessment for Water, Sanitation and Hygiene of Pakistan Refugees and IDPs - Afghanistan

MIGRATION OF SRI LANKAN WOMEN AS HOUSEMAIDS TO THE MIDDLE EAST

RAPID NEED ASSESSMENT REPORT

WOMEN'S AID ORGANISATION ANNUAL REPORT SERVICES STATISTICS 2016

Unaccompanied minors in Denmark - definition by authorities

Migrant Child Workers: Main Characteristics

Special Keynote Address, Icelandic Development Co-operation with UNIFEM in Small Island Developing States. Special Keynote Address

Policy Brief Internal Migration and Gender in Asia

Empowering Migrant Workers: A Field Experiment among Filipino Maids in Singapore

Relationship between remittances and rural primary education: a case study on a group of remittance beneficiaries

Poverty drives Myanmar girls into underage sex work

Questions on the articles of the Convention and the CEDAW Committee Concluding Observations on Tajikistan s combined fourth and fifth Periodic Reports

ECONOMY-MIGRATION, CAUSE AND CONSEQUENCE WHICH INCREASES THE NUMBER OF DIVORCES

WIDER DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE MIGRATION AND MOBILITY

CALL FOR EXPRESSION OF INTEREST. Implementation of the 2018 UNHCR Program for the Protection and Assistance of Refugees in Indonesia

Comments of Lisa Koop, Associate Director of Legal Services National Immigrant Justice Center

GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF SERBIA. Annex 1. to the Fourth Periodic Report on the Implementation of the CEDAW Convention

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women

MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT

Integrating Gender Statistics in Poverty Statistics Nepalese Experience. - Bikash Bista. Deputy Director General Central Bureau of Statistics

WOMEN AND GIRLS IN EMERGENCIES

Chapter 4. Socio-Economic Structure of the Angami and Chakhesang Women

Key Points. The needs and resources assessment is the basis for setting priorities and planning action.

REMITTANCE TRANSFERS TO ARMENIA: PRELIMINARY SURVEY DATA ANALYSIS

INPUT OF THE FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS TO THE TENTH COORDINATION MEETING ON INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION 1

How urban Syrian refugees, vulnerable Jordanians and other refugees in Jordan are being impacted by the Syria crisis A SUMMARY

Father s Labor Migration and Leaving the Parental Home in Rural Mozambique. Sophia Chae Sarah Hayford Victor Agadjanian

Harvesting the Seeds of Economic Growth

The Impact of Migration on Family Structure and Functioning: Case Study in Jawa 1. Ekawati S. Wahyuni 2

West Africa 4Mi Visualization Mali / Niger 2018

Migration, Immobility and Climate change: Gender dimensions of poverty in coastal Bangladesh

refugee and immigrant FOSTER CARE

PROTECTION ASSESSMENT ON IDPS FROM JUBA

New Evidence on Yemeni Return Migrants from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

MONGOLIA. 1. Discriminatory family code

High School Model United Nations February 26-February 27, 2011

Addressing the challenges faced by migrant and minority women in the EU 1

One People: Connecting Migrants and Changing Lives

CGAP Baseline Demand Side Study on Digital Remittances in Jordan: Key Qualitative Findings

Bethany L. Letiecq 1, Colleen K. Vesely 1, Elizabeth Davis 1, Rachael D. Goodman 1, Marlene Marquez 2, and Amigas de la Comunidad

Ethiopia Hotspot. Operating context

SOLWODI: Fighting Violence, Supporting Victims

Yemen Return Migrants Survey

IMPACT OF SEPARATION ON REFUGEE FAMILIES SYRIAN REFUGEES IN JORDAN

Collateral Repair Project Equipping and Empowering Female Leaders

SYRIAN REFUGEE RESPONSE: Vulnerability Assessment of Syrian Refugees in Lebanon LEBANON HIGHLIGHTS OF THE SURVEY. August 8, 2014

Russian Survey of Immigrants from Moldova, Georgia, and Azerbaijan. June, 2007

The Impact of International Migration on the Labour Market Behaviour of Women left-behind: Evidence from Senegal Abstract Introduction

Commission on the Status of Women Fiftieth session New York, 27 February 10 March 2006

Chapter 6. A Note on Migrant Workers in Punjab

Sampling Characteristics and Methodology

GENDERED CONCERNS IN COASTAL DISASTERS: AN ANALYSIS OF WOMEN S POLITICAL SUBORDINATION AND PROSPECTS FOR EMPOWERMENT

Goal 5 Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls

FIELD MANUAL FOR THE MIGRANT FOLLOW-UP DATA COLLECTION (EDITED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE)

LOBBY EUROPEEN DES FEMMES EUROPEAN WOMEN S LOBBY

BOOK REVIEW: Sex Trafficking in South Asia Telling Maya s Story

Anis Hidayah Migrant CARE IDM 2018

Sociology 125 Lectures 17 & 18 Gender November 6 & 8

The family reunification procedure for holders of an asylum residence permit

Diary of a Teenage Refugee By Amira 2013

Transcription:

INDONESIAN LABOR MIGRATION: SOCIAL COSTS TO THE LEFT- BEHINDS Presented by: Meirina Ayumi Malamassam Jakarta, 15 Desember 2015 PUSAT PENELITIAN KEPENDUDUKAN LIPI

Background Labor migration significant contribution to the economic wellbeing of left-behind families in areas of origin through remittances However, the migration also has impacts on caregiving arrangement of left-behind children Save the Children (2006): parental migration could violate a child s right to development, survival and education

P2K LIPI s study in 2011 aimed to understand the social cost of Indonesian labor migrants, particularly to the spouse and children left-behinds The research was conducted at two villages, Juntikebon & Juntikedokan, in Indramayu. Both villages are main sending areas of international labor migrants in the district.

DATA COLLECTION Survey: Interview with 201 selected left-behind households & their left-behind children Focused Group Discussions Male children left behind, female children left behind, wives left behind, husbands left behind, local government institutions

Profile of Respondents: Migrants & Their Left-Behinds The migrants: Mostly female (86%), more than half have worked abroad for more than 4 years, mostly work in Middle East countries The spouse left-behind: Mostly husband, 90 percent of them are in the main productive age (40-49 years old), low level of education, work in insecure (financially) type of job The children left-behind: More male, 70 percent of them are 13 years old and above, still in school (mostly in junior & senior high school)

Who s migrating? Who s taking care the children?

Social Dynamics of The Left-Behinds The decision-making process on migration - The process mainly involved the prospective migrant s immediate (nuclear) family, especially the spouse - Children were only informed their parents intension to work overseas - In fact, there was no really decision making process no family discussion to ask approval of all members.

My mother only told me that she would go to Saudi Arabia to work. My parents did not ask whether I agreed to my mother s leaving. Everything was decided by my parents, particularly my mother. Honestly, I was not happy with my mother working away from home, but in the end, I accepted it, since my mother would be leaving not to satisfy her own pleasures but to support my education and my family s needs. (Ay, a 17-year-old girl left by her mother).

Changing structure of the family - Shift on the husband s role no longer a breadwinner and responsible for all household tasks. - Childrearing and childcare became part of husbands responsibility this prevented them from working outside home to earn money, particularly those with younger age children. - Some have to earn money while waiting for the remittances from wife abroad.

I do all kinds of jobs while waiting for the money from my wife. I wait for the money sent by my wife to buy all the goods needed by the family. I cannot go out for work, since I have to do household chores, such as cooking, washing clothes and caring for the children. My youngest son cannot be left at any time. I borrow money from our neighbor if necessary while waiting for my wife s remittance. (Da, a 41-year-old husband of a migrant worker)

Communication Dynamics - Communication between left-behind children and their guardian mainly about daily live matter and on general issues. - Spesific issues such as learning in school and relationship with friend were not commonly shared with the guardians. - Children left behind kept communicate with their parents abroad.

Impact on Children: Resiliency and Vulnerability Resilience and Coping with Separation - Children left behind, mostly by their mother, tend to face social and emotional or psychological problems. - Parental absence implies loss of parental affection, attention and support feeling of abandonment

... It feels different without a mother around. For instance, when mother was at home, she usually looked for me whenever I was late in coming home for a few hours. Things are different now with my father. He is not aware if I come home late at night. He is rarely angry. He also seldom gives advice. My father just takes care of finances. (Eng, a 16-yearold boy left by his mother)

... My mother pursued a job in Saudi Arabia. It s okay because she wishes to provide for our needs, such as my school fees. But I was still young when my mom went abroad. I was in year four of primary school at that time. I cried a lot. It took me a long time to adjust [to my mother s absence]. Even until now, I still feel sad and lonely, especially when I have some problems. (Nov, a 15-year-old girl left by her mother)

Impact on Children s Education - 71 % children respondents were still in school - 20 % were not in school - 9 % were dropouts some have no money since remittances spent to fulfill other needs, such as house construction.

Percentage Distribution of Sampled Children Enrolling in School by Class Performance Percentage Distribution of Sampled Children Enrolling in School by Grade Achievement

Impacts on Family Relationship - Regular communication between husband and wife abroad by telephone call and sms to keep spousal relationship and solve daily problems - Some husbands of migrant workers conducting negative behavior remarried while their wives were working abroad. - Such negative behavior was not conducted by interviewed husbands.

I think I have no time to be bored. I am busy doing everything so I just fall asleep [at the end of the day]. I wake up in the morning, go to work and conduct household tasks, such as washing clothes. I have no time for things that are not worthwhile or a waste of time. I am scared and never think of going to a prostitute while my wife is away. (Un, a 42- year-old husband of a migrant worker)

Impacts on Parenting Practices - Parenting was undertaking solely by father unfortunately differ from it was practiced by mother. - Father tend not to care about the specific issues, such as learning problems and children s social life outside home. - Grandmothers tended to spoil children to compensate for the absence of their mother sacrifice of losing their mother s love and care for the survival of the family.

Mother s care is different from father s. When there were instances in which I came home late, my mother would look for me and tell me not to do it again and to come home on time. This is not done by my father. He never looks for me even if I come home late at night. Sometime, I miss my mother s attention. (Hd, a 17-year-old son of a female migrant)

Recommendations Based on the study findings, some recommendations are proposed to improve the conditions of the family left behind (children, spouse and extended family members) as well as the migrant workers: For government (national to the local levels) to set up crisis centers where the family left behind, especially teenage children, can go to when they want to talk about their problems and find clarity and sense in their situation.

For government (national to the local levels) to develop a program on the management of remittances for the welfare of the family, especially the children, left behind, in collaboration with NGOs. This may be designed as a people empowerment program to improve the community s knowledge of how to manage household earnings and effectively address the children s nutritional and educational needs.

Implement socialization programs for relatives who have been entrusted to take care of the children left behind. This may help them share experiences and insight on how to handle the children especially teenagers. Initiate a guidance counsellor program in school for children of migrant workers. Future research on social cost to the left-behinds in regions with different migrants group typology (such as male/father labor migrants, skilled workers) are encouraged

THANK YOU