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Qenja: child fostering and relocation practices in the Amhara region, Ethiopia

In this article we discuss temporary relocation and informal labour of children in rural Ethiopia. We respond to the call 'to understand the wider logic underlying child relocation and non-parental residence among populations experiencing poverty' (Boyden, J. 2013. "We're Not Goi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Children's geographies 2016-01, Vol.14 (1), p.46-62
Main Authors: Kassa, Sophia Chanyalew, Abebe, Tatek
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:In this article we discuss temporary relocation and informal labour of children in rural Ethiopia. We respond to the call 'to understand the wider logic underlying child relocation and non-parental residence among populations experiencing poverty' (Boyden, J. 2013. "We're Not Going to Suffer Like this in the Mud: Educational Aspirations, Social Mobility and Independent Child Migration among Populations Living in Poverty." Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education 43 (5): 580-600. 582). Drawing on the perspectives of children and families involved in the practice of qenja (meaning 'teaming' or 'forming a coalition') we examine how - in contexts of uneven distribution of rural labour - children's involvement in transient agricultural labour outside the home is a fundamental feature of social reproduction. We argue that qenja is a social coping strategy that co-exists alongside gendered and generational relations of household production and reproduction. An understanding of the practice as merely transactional and exploitative ignores long-standing community strategies of labour acquisition and redistribution. We stress that child protection campaigns by non-governmental organizations and national legislations that intend to criminalize the practice are not in the interest of children, families, and communities.
ISSN:1473-3285
1473-3277
DOI:10.1080/14733285.2014.974508