Abstract

African people and their families find themselves in a situation of tension because of their transition from rural to urban life. This tension has created a third family type, namely emerging families. The emerging families are characterised by a sense of life being under a constant strain to meet individual needs and at the same time the expected needs of the extended family. In such a situation, an individual gets sandwiched in a space of confusion, trapped in an in-between space where one is unsure whether to stick to traditional rural values and norms amidst the challenges of the reality of inadequate financial resources to support extended family members. Thus, one’s life space in Africa should be considered as being in a state of shifting fluidity. The outcome is an emerging and negotiated family where new arrangements are developing. In response, pastoral care should take a public dimension. Pastoral care should develop an analytic framework as well as a public practical theological ministerial approach that responds to these changing family patterns. It is proposed that a responsive public pastoral care approach could perform three tasks: preventive, mitigatory and maintenance pastoral care.

Highlights

  • Industrialisation and urbanisation have been identified as forces that have disrupted family setup in Africa and other parts of the world

  • This article argued that African people and families are found in a situation of tension because of their transition from rural to urban life

  • The emerging family is characterised by a sense of life being under a constant strain to meet individual needs and the expected needs of the extended family

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Summary

Introduction

Industrialisation and urbanisation have been identified as forces that have disrupted family setup in Africa and other parts of the world. They project African families in a way that is reminiscent of traditional village life practices despite the effects of urbanisation. It should be maintained that the current situation of Africa after urbanisation and industrialisation has altered African families to resemble some elements of Western nuclear families but at the same time holds onto traditional African practices.

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