Revista Sobre la Infancia y la Adolescencia (Oct 2015)

Rights and duties in parenting practices

  • Ana Paula Solans,
  • Berta Rotstein de Gueller,
  • Antonella Caggianelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4995/reinad.2015.3881
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 0, no. 9
pp. 60 – 73

Abstract

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The aim of this presentation is to present the results of three qualitative research on the exercise of rights and duties on Parenting Practices (PP), held in Buenos Aires, Argentina. They included interviews with mothers of children with Unsatisfied Basic Needs concretized between 2009 and 2013. Their analysis revealed that in this set of households were carried out three types of PP: imposition, guide and free will, the latter was the most used. As part of this practice, children managed their hours of sleep, wakefulness and leisure, without the intervention of their parents. It was noted, for example, that children over 10 years decided on matters concerning their schooling, absenting progressively to school, to abandonment. These practices were respected by their parents. By default, the postponement of pleasure (tolerance to frustration) will not be exercised: they let children do at will. A trend of teenage pregnancy and the formation of pairs of children between 14-16 years with parental consent was also noted. In this sense, even when children lived in a house in contact with their parents, with a supply of food and available school, the indiscriminate exercise of free will put children's health at risk and full development, curtailing their rights. We recommend further studies such timely interventions to promote programs and projects designed to guide parents on issues related to the development of children as subjects of Rights and Duties.

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