Department of Sociology, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, USA.
AJS. 2010 Mar;115(5):1435-79. doi: 10.1086/651374.
Migrants form nonfamilial ties in urban destinations, which could compete with origin families for a share of remittances. A framework of competing commitment predicts that new relationships affect remittances depending on the extent to which they substitute for the benefits provided by origin families. Analyses of data from urban migrants in Kenya show that serious nonmarital sexual partners substitute for psychosocial support from the rural family and that material transfers migrants give to these partners significantly reduce remittances. The findings have implications for the ways scholars conceive of competition, the nature of exchange, and substitution of support across intimate relationships.
移民在城市目的地建立非家庭关系,这可能会与原籍家庭争夺汇款份额。竞争承诺框架预测,新的关系会影响汇款,这取决于它们在多大程度上替代原籍家庭提供的利益。对肯尼亚城市移民数据的分析表明,严重的非婚姻性伴侣替代了农村家庭的心理社会支持,移民向这些伴侣提供的物质转移显著减少了汇款。这些发现对学者们理解竞争的方式、交换的性质以及亲密关系中支持的替代具有启示意义。