Over the past decade, the well-being of children in geographically-dispersed, trans-national families has inspired increasing interest from scholars, yet little research has explored the psychosocial health of children living in such family arrangements in high-migration countries in Eastern Europe. In many countries in the region, large-scale emigration that began in the immediate post-Soviet years has incited intense discourses on the potential impacts of migration on child well-being, yet little research has explored the phenomenon. Georgia is one such country that has experienced high migration, with over one-quarter of its population thought to reside abroad in 2010. Using survey data collected in Georgia in 2012 (CELB-GE), this study ...