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Only Near Is Dear? Doing Elderly Care with Everyday ICTs in Indian Transnational Families

In Kerala, South India, young people, especially women, are encouraged to become nurses in order to migrate abroad for work and thereby improve the financial status of their family. Meanwhile, many of their parents remain in India by themselves. This is occurring in the context of a strong popular d...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tanja Ahlin
Format: Printed Book
Published: MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY QUARTERLY, 2017
Online Access:http://10.26.1.76/ks/008223.pdf
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100 |a Tanja Ahlin  |9 158918 
245 |a Only Near Is Dear? Doing Elderly Care with Everyday ICTs in Indian Transnational Families 
260 |b MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY QUARTERLY,  |c 2017 
300 |a pp. 85–102  |b  Vol. 32, Issue 1,  
520 |a In Kerala, South India, young people, especially women, are encouraged to become nurses in order to migrate abroad for work and thereby improve the financial status of their family. Meanwhile, many of their parents remain in India by themselves. This is occurring in the context of a strong popular discourse of elder abandonment, related to the local norms of intergenerational co-habitation. Based on fieldwork in Kerala and one of the nurses’ destination countries, Oman, I present evidence that complicates this discourse by showing how: (1) migration is a form of elder care practice in itself; and (2) care for the elderly continues across countries and continents with the help of information and communication technologies (ICTs). Using the theoretical approaches of science and technology studies, I analyze ICTs as key members of care collectives and argue that ICTs have a significant role in reshaping care relations at a distance. [care, aging, ICTs, migration, Indian transnational families]  
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