Journal Article

Madhavan, S.

Fosterage patterns in the age of AIDS: continuity and change
2004, Social Sciences and Medicine, N*deg;58, 7, p. 1443-54

Keywords : Age Factors; AIDS; Behavior; Child; child rearing; Demographic Factors; Diseases; Economic Factors; Extended family; Family and Household; Family Characteristics; Financial Activities; Financing, Organized; Fostering; Funding; Government; HIV Infections; Kinship Networks; Literature review; Orphans; Population; Population Characteristics; Public Assistance; Social discrimination; Social Problems; Viral Diseases; Youth
Countries : Africa; Developing Countries; South Africa; Southern Africa; SOUTHERN AFRICA; Subsaharan Africa

Abstract : An estimated 4 million children, or about 10% of the entire South African population, will be orphaned by the year 2015. There is growing consensus that the extended family system is no longer capable of providing for orphans given severe economic constraints. There is, therefore, an urgency to develop appropriate interventions to support families and take care of these children. This article examines some of the existing literature on child fosterage and uses it to highlight understudied aspects of the current situation of children orphaned through AIDS in South Africa. Of particular concern are the points of continuity and change in fosterage patterns before and after the onset of the epidemic in South Africa. I suggest that an understanding of the short- and long-term consequences for children orphaned by AIDS in South Africa calls for historical contextualisation given that child fostering, both voluntarily and involuntarily, has been a feature of black family life since well before the onset of HIV/AIDS. In addition, I demonstrate the value of examining kinship, family, and networks in order to fully understand the circumstances of fostering these children. The paper concludes with a call for more research on children orphaned by AIDS in South Africa that will provide not only more data, but also enrich theoretical approaches to studying patterns of child fosterage in Africa and elsewhere.

Notes : 0277-9536

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