In this article we discuss the role that fathers and paternal families play in acknowledging and caring for children born outside of a recognised union in two southern African communities – Nyanga East, South Africa and Mokhotlong, Lesotho. While these communities are geographically and culturally close, there are important differences in the responses to the care of children born outside of a recognised union. In Nyanga East, despite not paying damages, the genitor and the paternal family are increasingly becoming involved in the care of children, even when they are no longer in a relationship with the mother; whereas in Mokhotlong, if a pregnant woman is not in a formal or informal union with the father, she and her family effectively era...
Many women who engage in sex work in sub-Saharan Africa become pregnant, often unintentionally. Ther...
Child marriage is associated with adverse health and social outcomes for women and girls. Among past...
Marital estrangement and formal divorce are vital conjunctures for married women’s kinship relations...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Anthropology Southern ...
Qualitative and quantitative research has shown that non-nuclear family households remain common in ...
In the pre-colonial period, and in most parts of Southern Africa throughout the nineteenth and well ...
Care for AIDS orphans in southern Africa is frequently characterized as a crisis , where kin-based ...
Being matrilineal and matrilocal, the Bemba people believe that “children belong to the mother”. Thi...
The sites for earning a living and for maintaining a family, of production and reproduction, remain ...
Studies on African fatherhood represent African fathers as problematic and in South Africa, they are...
Kin and child survival in Malawi: are matrilineal kin always beneficial in a matrilineal society? Ar...
This article focuses on the relationship between stepmothers and stepchildren, based on field resear...
The strongest ties in African families are consangineous rather than conjugal, and child fosterage i...
The sites for earning a living and for maintaining a family, of production and reproduction, remain ...
A substantial body of research has consistently concluded that children growing up with absentee fat...
Many women who engage in sex work in sub-Saharan Africa become pregnant, often unintentionally. Ther...
Child marriage is associated with adverse health and social outcomes for women and girls. Among past...
Marital estrangement and formal divorce are vital conjunctures for married women’s kinship relations...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Anthropology Southern ...
Qualitative and quantitative research has shown that non-nuclear family households remain common in ...
In the pre-colonial period, and in most parts of Southern Africa throughout the nineteenth and well ...
Care for AIDS orphans in southern Africa is frequently characterized as a crisis , where kin-based ...
Being matrilineal and matrilocal, the Bemba people believe that “children belong to the mother”. Thi...
The sites for earning a living and for maintaining a family, of production and reproduction, remain ...
Studies on African fatherhood represent African fathers as problematic and in South Africa, they are...
Kin and child survival in Malawi: are matrilineal kin always beneficial in a matrilineal society? Ar...
This article focuses on the relationship between stepmothers and stepchildren, based on field resear...
The strongest ties in African families are consangineous rather than conjugal, and child fosterage i...
The sites for earning a living and for maintaining a family, of production and reproduction, remain ...
A substantial body of research has consistently concluded that children growing up with absentee fat...
Many women who engage in sex work in sub-Saharan Africa become pregnant, often unintentionally. Ther...
Child marriage is associated with adverse health and social outcomes for women and girls. Among past...
Marital estrangement and formal divorce are vital conjunctures for married women’s kinship relations...