WORKING PAPER 08/237
Title:
Beyond ‘Fluidity': Kinship and Households as Social Projects
Author(s): Jeremy Seekings
Date of Publication: December 2008
Price: R 5.00
Abstract
Urban and rural households in South Africa are fluid (in that individuals move
between households) and porous (in that individuals may be members of more
than one ‘household’ at the same time). One important consequence of this
fluidity and porosity is that the effects of AIDS-related disability and death may
be mitigated, as households are reconstituted to provide care as well as to
protect the welfare of dependents. This paper argues that our understanding of
household dynamics needs to go beyond asserting the fact of fluidity (or
porosity). Precisely how fluid and porous are households, and (in particular)
how ‘extended’ are families in terms of the obligations and claims that kin can
make on each other? Are there moral or normative constraints on the decisions
made by individuals with respect to householding and kinship? The paper
reviews the extant literatures on these questions in South Africa as a basis for
further empirical research. Whilst inconclusive, the secondary literatures
suggest that the claims entailed in kinship are more and more often evaded,
especially by men (and paternal kin), and that responsibilies and obligations are
increasingly conditional. Children – including, but not only, orphans – are
readily accommodated by kin. South Africa’s social assistance system means
that the elderly are financial breadwinners rather than dependents, helping to
perpetuate the practice of extended family-households. Perhaps the most
striking shift in household and kinship has been the decline of marriage and the
crisis of patrilinearity. There is indirect evidence that people not only prioritise
the claims of children but also see the elderly and sick as more deserving than
able-bodied adults of working age. Overall, ‘fluidity’ and the claims made in
the name of kinship have clear limits. The paper concludes with the suggestion
that further empirical research be informed by the methodologies used in studies
of kinship in the UK and USA, notwithstanding the substantive differences
between householding and kinship in different settings.
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