Institute of Sociology
of the Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology
of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Samba A. D.-B., Goliusova Yu. V., Demidov A. A., Ananyeva K. I. and Ondar N. O. Sociological portrait of the single-parent family in the Republic of Tuva. New Research of Tuva, 2024, no. 1, pp. 184-196. (In Russ.). DOI: https: ...



Samba A. D.-B., Goliusova Yu. V., Demidov A. A., Ananyeva K. I. and Ondar N. O. Sociological portrait of the single-parent family in the Republic of Tuva. New Research of Tuva, 2024, no. 1, pp. 184-196. (In Russ.). DOI: https://doi.org/10.25178/nit.2024.1.12
ISSN 2079-8482
DOI 10.25178/nit.2024.1.12
РИНЦ: https://elibrary.ru/contents.asp?id=64838920

Posted on site: 18.03.24

Текст статьи на сайте журнала URL: https://nit.tuva.asia/nit/article/view/1309/1620 (дата обращения 18.03.2024)


Abstract

The article presents a sociological portrait of the contemporary single-parent family (having children under 18 and one of the parents) in the Republic of Tuva. The analysis is based on the results of the sociological study “Issues of single-parent Families in the Republic of Tuva”, conducted by the authors in 2022 (sample size 1539 individuals), as well as materials from discussions with experts from social protection agencies on family and child welfare in the Republic of Tuva. Marriage and divorce coefficients in the republic were considered and analyzed in comparison with nationwide data. According to statistical data, the proportion of incomplete families in the total number of families is 6%, but these data do not account for various forms of cohabitation, etc. Among survey participants who are in a registered marriage and have children under 18 (complete family group), 63.1% are represented, while those having children but not in a registered marriage constitute 35.1%. In the overall sample of incomplete family representatives, the figure stands at 17.1%. This is comparable to nationwide indicators, but the structure of incomplete families in terms of the reasons for their formation significantly differs. The single-parent families are characterized by a more vulnerable position, and they are more likely to be at risk of poverty and social exclusion due to gender inequality. In the single-parent family, the sole parent is typically a working and often additionally part-time employed mother or father who has to compensate for the lack of resources of the other parent. As a parent, she is less likely to take out loans, but may do so for purchasing essential items. To support the family, this parent may sell or pawn personal belongings. In one- third of cases, she is willing to engage in seasonal migration for additional income. In Tuva, for an incomplete family, the presence of one or two minors is characteristic in more than 70% of cases. In over half of cases, these children are born out of wedlock. The father is known; in one-third of cases, he provides financial support to the family, in less than half — maintains some emotional contact with the children, however, alimony is provided by not even every tenth single mother. Prejudiced attitudes from the surrounding community towards representatives of the single-parent families are not felt by both the adult and the child The article presents a sociological portrait of the contemporary single-parent family (having children under 18 and one of the parents) in the Republic of Tuva. The analysis is based on the results of the sociological study “Issues of single-parent Families in the Republic of Tuva”, conducted by the authors in 2022 (sample size 1539 individuals), as well as materials from discussions with experts from social protection agencies on family and child welfare in the Republic of Tuva. Marriage and divorce coefficients in the republic were considered and analyzed in comparison with nationwide data. According to statistical data, the proportion of incomplete families in the total number of families is 6%, but these data do not account for various forms of cohabitation, etc. Among survey participants who are in a registered marriage and have children under 18 (complete family group), 63.1% are represented, while those having children but not in a registered marriage constitute 35.1%. In the overall sample of incomplete family representatives, the figure stands at 17.1%. This is comparable to nationwide indicators, but the structure of incomplete families in terms of the reasons for their formation significantly differs. The single-parent families are characterized by a more vulnerable position, and they are more likely to be at risk of poverty and social exclusion due to gender inequality. In the single-parent family, the sole parent is typically a working and often additionally part-time employed mother or father who has to compensate for the lack of resources of the other parent. As a parent, she is less likely to take out loans, but may do so for purchasing essential items. To support the family, this parent may sell or pawn personal belongings. In onethird of cases, she is willing to engage in seasonal migration for additional income. In Tuva, for an incomplete family, the presence of one or two minors is characteristic in more than 70% of cases. In over half of cases, these children are born out of wedlock. The father is known; in one-third of cases, he provides financial support to the family, in less than half — maintains some emotional contact with the children, however, alimony is provided by not even every tenth single mother. Prejudiced attitudes from the surrounding community towards representatives of the single-parent families are not felt by both the adult and the child