Poverty Vs Parenting: an emergent dichotomy

Popular and political discussions in the UK about children’s future prospects are currently dominated by an emergent dichotomy in which either ‘poverty’ or ‘parenting’ is posited as the explanatory factor. In the current period of austerity this oppositional framing has become increasingly explicit:...

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Main Author: Renaud Beeckmans
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2012-07-01
Series:Studies in the Maternal
Online Access:https://www.mamsie.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/4153/
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spelling doaj-4e1a9b6cdca54a06a3dd8dae35f83c952021-08-18T09:51:07ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesStudies in the Maternal1759-04342012-07-014210.16995/sim.37Poverty Vs Parenting: an emergent dichotomyRenaud Beeckmans0Unité de recherche en Neurosciences Cognitives, Université Libre de Bruxelles. 50, av. F.D. Roosevelt, 1050, Bruxelles, BelgiumPopular and political discussions in the UK about children’s future prospects are currently dominated by an emergent dichotomy in which either ‘poverty’ or ‘parenting’ is posited as the explanatory factor. In the current period of austerity this oppositional framing has become increasingly explicit: in response to the riots which took place across England in August 2011 one set of commentators focused on a lack of personal responsibility with its origins in the absences of appropriate parental role models, while others emphasised poverty and social disadvantage as causal mechanisms. The same pattern of highlighting either poverty or parenting is evident in major policy documents, including two significant government commissioned reports The Foundation Years (2010) and Early Intervention (2011).This paper argues that the development of the poverty/parenting dichotomy should be resisted because it is both unconvincing and unhelpful. Notwithstanding its popular and political prevalence, this discourse is unconvincing because research evidence suggests the importance of both parental engagement and financial resources for outcomes for children. Further, it is unhelpful because the creation and maintenance of this dichotomy works against developing a nuanced understanding of how the practices and attitudes of parents interact with economic circumstances and access to resources. Therefore the paper argues that as social researchers we must actively challenge lazy misrepresentations of existing evidence and counter any simplistic discourse. This needs to be done in combination with conducting work which can develop better understandings of the relationships between material disadvantage and what parents do, as well as effectively communicating these findings.https://www.mamsie.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/4153/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Renaud Beeckmans
spellingShingle Renaud Beeckmans
Poverty Vs Parenting: an emergent dichotomy
Studies in the Maternal
author_facet Renaud Beeckmans
author_sort Renaud Beeckmans
title Poverty Vs Parenting: an emergent dichotomy
title_short Poverty Vs Parenting: an emergent dichotomy
title_full Poverty Vs Parenting: an emergent dichotomy
title_fullStr Poverty Vs Parenting: an emergent dichotomy
title_full_unstemmed Poverty Vs Parenting: an emergent dichotomy
title_sort poverty vs parenting: an emergent dichotomy
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Studies in the Maternal
issn 1759-0434
publishDate 2012-07-01
description Popular and political discussions in the UK about children’s future prospects are currently dominated by an emergent dichotomy in which either ‘poverty’ or ‘parenting’ is posited as the explanatory factor. In the current period of austerity this oppositional framing has become increasingly explicit: in response to the riots which took place across England in August 2011 one set of commentators focused on a lack of personal responsibility with its origins in the absences of appropriate parental role models, while others emphasised poverty and social disadvantage as causal mechanisms. The same pattern of highlighting either poverty or parenting is evident in major policy documents, including two significant government commissioned reports The Foundation Years (2010) and Early Intervention (2011).This paper argues that the development of the poverty/parenting dichotomy should be resisted because it is both unconvincing and unhelpful. Notwithstanding its popular and political prevalence, this discourse is unconvincing because research evidence suggests the importance of both parental engagement and financial resources for outcomes for children. Further, it is unhelpful because the creation and maintenance of this dichotomy works against developing a nuanced understanding of how the practices and attitudes of parents interact with economic circumstances and access to resources. Therefore the paper argues that as social researchers we must actively challenge lazy misrepresentations of existing evidence and counter any simplistic discourse. This needs to be done in combination with conducting work which can develop better understandings of the relationships between material disadvantage and what parents do, as well as effectively communicating these findings.
url https://www.mamsie.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/4153/
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