Foster fathers performing gender: the negotiation and reproduction of parenting roles in families who foster |
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Authors: | Philip Heslop |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Social Work, Education and Community Wellbeing, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UKphilip.heslop@northumbria.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTFoster care research and social work practice tend to focus on how women look after children living in foster care. This focus has limited our understanding of what it is that men do within foster caring families and they are automatically assigned secondary or breadwinning roles. Families who foster involve some form of renegotiation of roles to care for children they foster. While foster caring arrangements are internationally diverse, foster carers often work with social workers. It would therefore seem important for social workers to understand how foster carers negotiate their parenting roles. This paper reports findings from seven main caring foster-fathers who took part in a wider study involving twentythree foster-fathers. The evidence provided by these foster-fathers demonstrate they are highly motivated to care for children and, alongside delivering traditional parenting roles, they negotiate new, non-traditional parenting roles as foster-fathers. These new roles, taken on by foster-fathers, often challenge stereotyped masculinity while they also concurrently enact parenting norms. This study applied Judith Butler’s work on performing gender to foster caring families to theorise on the process whereby foster-fathers negotiate diverse masculinities and continue to reproduce gendered relations in foster caring families. |
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Keywords: | Discourse fathers/fatherhood foster care gender social work |
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