Parents’ international migration: unresolved issues in public policy
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This article takes into account the perspective of family members who stay in the country of origin, who recognize that the transnational experience transforms relationships and provides strategies to continue supplying economic support and strengthening affective and communicative bonds while keeping their maternal and paternal functions, usually carried out a mid tensions and conflicts. This brings to light the ruptures and/or continuities of parenthood; in some cases fulfilling the expectations of family members, and in other cases recognizing the intangible costs that result in violations of the rights of migrants and their relatives—issues that must now be debated and included in public policies.
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