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Perceived food and labor equity and school attendance among Ugandan children living in kin care
Authors:Jini Lyman Roby  Stacey Anne Shaw  Laurel High George
Institution:1. School of Social Work, Brigham Young University, , Provo, UT, USA;2. School of Social Work, Columbia University, , New York, NY, USA;3. Veteran's Administration Services, , Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Abstract:Emerging research suggests that biological relatedness contributes to differential treatment between children being raised by kin and the biological children in the caregiver's household. This potential concern may be elevated especially when household resources are stretched thin. In this study, 518 Ugandan youth and their caregivers were interviewed individually, examining the association between relatedness and perceived food and work equity, and school attendance. Household income, but not relatedness, was negatively associated with food inequity. However, relatedness was positively associated with perceived disparity in the distribution of work among children living in the household, and with children's school attendance. These findings support and challenge previous findings, raising further research questions and suggesting practice implications. Key Practitioner Message: ● Children in kinship care may be experiencing intrahousehold disparity in the amount of household work they are asked to perform; ● Disparity in school attendance between biological and kin children in the same household could have negative implications for the long‐term wellbeing of children in kin care; ● Programs should be tailored to monitor this type of intrahousehold disparity in treatment.
Keywords:kinship care  intrahousehold discrimination  orphan care  Uganda  food equity  labor equity  school attendance  Uganda
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