Men's involvement in the South African family: Engendering
change in the AIDS era.
Montgomery CM,
Hosegood V,
Busza J,
Timaeus IM.
Centre for Population Studies, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine,
London, UK.
The literature on the South African family and its response to the HIV/AIDS
epidemic is rife with accounts of men that reflect a deficit model of male
involvement. Few acknowledge the historical, economic and social complexities of
male involvement in family life. As the South African family undergoes
demographic, social and economic transformation there is a need to describe the
range of roles played by all household members, including men. This paper
examines data collected over two and a half years from a small sample of
households affected by HIV/AIDS in rural KwaZulu Natal, South Africa.
Non-participant observations were made during outreach visits by research staff
to twenty households caring for at least one adult with disease symptoms
indicative of TB or AIDS. We find that men are positively involved with their
families and households in a wide range of ways. They care for patients and
children, financially support immediate and extended family members and are
present at home, thereby enabling women to work or support other households. As
the qualitative data demonstrate, however, such activities are often not
acknowledged. The dominant perception of both female respondents and research
assistants continues to be that men are not caring for their families because
they are irresponsible and profligate. We consider reasons why this disjuncture
exists and how more men might be encouraged to fulfil such roles and activities
as their families and households suffer the social and economic impacts of
HIV/AIDS.
PMID: 16300871