Abstract

Whilst newly-wed wives and young mothers have traditionally been ‘tied to the bamboo grove’ in Vietnam, today nearly as many young married women are migrating from rural to urban areas as young married men. This shift implie s a radical break with conventional expectations of young married women as new daughters-in-law and as the mothers of young children. It is also closely related with changes i n the expectations young married men have of their wives and of their own parenting roles. This paper uses qualitative life histories from 76 married male and female rural-to-urban migrants in their peak child-bearing years to explo re their reflections on the impact of migration on their left-behind children and spouses . The migrants subscribe to social norms of family co-residence and justify their absence in te rms of fulfilling their parental or marital roles and actively manage their parenting and marit al roles in ways that are strongly gendered.

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