Supporting Fathers in Multi-Ethnic Societies: Insights from British Asian Fathers

Abstract There is concern that current UK policy and intervention aimed at supporting fathers remains primarily informed by dominant White middle-class values and experiences, and therefore fails to respond adequately to the needs of Britain's diverse fathers. This paper contributes to understanding of ethnic diversity in fathering contexts, practices and experiences, by reporting findings from a qualitative study of British Asian fathers, involving in-depth interviews with fifty-nine fathers and thirty-three mothers from Bangladeshi Muslim, Pakistani Muslim, Gujarati Hindu and Punjabi Sikh background, and over eight additional respondents engaged through Key Informant interviews, ethnographic interviews and group discussions. The paper highlights four areas that require greater recognition by policy-makers and practitioners to appropriately meet the needs of fathers from diverse ethnic and socio-economic backgrounds. These are: recognising that fathers and mothers do not necessarily constitute an autonomous unit; appreciating diversity in fathers’ understandings of desirable child outcomes; addressing additional obstacles to achieving similar outcomes for children; and understanding that the boundaries and content of fathering are not universally recognised. Policies that are less normative and more responsive to diversity are essential to ensure that all fathers can be effectively supported.

[1]  E. Flouri,et al.  What predicts fathers' involvement with their children? A prospective study of intact families , 2003 .

[2]  Y. Gunaratnam Faking ‘Race’ or Making ‘Race’? ‘Race-Of-Interviewer-Effects’ in Survey Research , 2003 .

[3]  Jessica Ball,et al.  Fathers’ contributions to children’s well-being , 2007 .

[4]  Michael Harris Bond,et al.  A critical look at parenting research from the mainstream: Problems uncovered while adapting Western research to non-Western cultures , 2002 .

[5]  Val Gillies Meeting parents’ needs? Discourses of ‘support’ and ‘inclusion’ in family policy , 2005 .

[6]  Anita Garey,et al.  Invisible Inequality : Social Class and Childrearing in Black Families and White Families , 2002 .

[7]  Randal D. Day,et al.  Scholarship on Fatherhood in the 1990s and Beyond , 2000 .

[8]  C. Tamis-LeMonda,et al.  Gender Roles in Immigrant Families: Parenting Views, Practices, and Child Development , 2009 .

[9]  L. Archer Constructing Minority Ethnic Middle-class Identity: An Exploratory Study with Parents, Pupils and Young Professionals , 2011 .

[10]  David Wainwright,et al.  Can Sociological Research Be Qualitative, Critical and Valid? , 1997 .

[11]  T. Modood,et al.  Ethnic Minority Families , 1998 .

[12]  I. Ville,et al.  Identity in Question: The Development of a Survey in France , 2005 .

[13]  R. Harwood,et al.  Ethnic Category Labels, Parental Beliefs, and the Contextualized Individual: An Exploration of the Individualism - Sociocentrism Debate , 2001 .

[14]  Barbara Lonbaken Health and Social Research in Multiethnic Societies , 2007 .

[15]  S. Karlsen ‘Black like Beckham’? Moving beyond definitions of ethnicity based on skin colour and ancestry , 2004, Ethnicity & health.

[16]  K. Bhavnani,et al.  Shifting identities shifting racisms: An introduction , 1994 .

[17]  Sarah Maiter,et al.  Fatherhood and Culture: Moving Beyond Stereotypical Understandings , 2008 .

[18]  Y. Gunaratnam Researching 'Race' and Ethnicity: Methods, Knowledge and Power , 2003 .

[19]  Deborah Ghate,et al.  Engaging fathers in preventive services: fathers and family centres , 2000 .

[20]  Nick Frost,et al.  Every Child Matters: Change for Children , 2004 .

[21]  C. Tamis-LeMonda,et al.  Low-Income Fathers' Involvement in Their Toddlers' Lives: Biological Fathers from the Early Head Start Research and Evaluation Study , 2004 .

[22]  Jeffrey K. Shears understanding differences in fathering activities across race and ethnicity , 2007 .

[23]  T. Modood Anti-Essentialism, Multiculturalism and the 'Recognition' of Religious Groups* , 1998 .

[24]  A. Shaw Kinship and Continuity: Pakistani Families in Britain , 2000 .

[25]  L. Tett Parents as problems or parents as people? Parental involvement programmes, schools and adult educators , 2001 .

[26]  S. Gewirtz Cloning the Blairs: New Labour's programme for the re-socialization of working-class parents , 2001 .

[27]  S. Ball,et al.  Working-class fathers and childcare: the economic and family contexts of fathering in the UK , 2011 .

[28]  K. Atkin,et al.  The dilemmas of providing welfare in an ethnically diverse state : seeking reconciliation in the role of a 'reflexive practitioner' , 2007 .

[29]  Stuart Hall The question of cultural identity , 1992 .

[30]  M. Lamb,et al.  The development and significance of father-child relationships in two-parent families. , 2004 .

[31]  R. Edwards,et al.  Support in Parenting: Values and Consensus concerning who to turn to , 2004, Journal of Social Policy.

[32]  James Page,et al.  A review of how fathers can be better recognised and supported through DCSF policy , 2008 .

[33]  Val Gillies Understandings and Experiences of Involved Fathering in the United Kingdom: Exploring Classed Dimensions , 2009 .

[34]  T. Modood ‘Black’, racial equality and Asian identity , 1988 .

[35]  Schools,et al.  The children's plan: building brighter futures , 2007 .

[36]  Gillian Evans Educational Failure and Working Class White Children in Britain , 2006 .

[37]  M. Lamb,et al.  Fatherhood in the twenty-first century. , 2000, Child development.

[38]  Shoshana Pollack Focus-Group Methodology in Research with Incarcerated Women: Race, Power, and Collective Experience , 2003 .

[39]  D. Roer-strier,et al.  Fatherhood and immigration: challenging the deficit theory , 2005 .

[40]  Richard Jenkins,et al.  Rethinking ethnicity: Identity, categorization and power , 1994 .

[41]  B. Hewitt,et al.  Fatherhood in the 21st Century , 2012 .