‘I Want Good Children, Also for this Country’: How Dutch Minority Muslim Parents’ Experience and Negotiate Parenting, Parenthood and Citizenship

Publication date

2020

Authors

van Beurden, Sparky LolaISNI 0000000492840559
de Haan, M.J.ORCID 0000-0002-0412-7442ISNI 0000000080519443

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

This article investigates how minority Muslim parents experience and negotiate parenting, parenthood and citizenship in a context of increasing sociopolitical tensions. Drawing upon both parenting and parenthood as well as minority citizenship studies, it conceptualises parenthood as a domain for experiences of in- and exclusion of belonging to society. Based on an ethnographic study with self-organizing Moroccan-Dutch parent groups, analyses show that political discourses contesting migrants’ belonging to society as well as disqualifications of minority parenting in parenting discourses and social services enter these families’ domestic lives in pervasive ways. As parents engage in sociopolitical dynamics in public spheres, they ground themselves in migratory, classed, historical, religious and globalized perspectives to express, counter and co-build parenthood and citizenship notions. As such, this study sheds light on how parents affirm their civic contribution to society as a parent, as well as on the civic nature of parenthood. Translating the findings to practice, this article draws attention to minority Muslim families’ diverse stances as child rearing citizens.

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Citation

van Beurden, S L & de Haan, M J 2020, '‘I Want Good Children, Also for this Country’: How Dutch Minority Muslim Parents’ Experience and Negotiate Parenting, Parenthood and Citizenship', Journal of Intercultural Studies, vol. 41, no. 5, pp. 574-590. https://doi.org/10.1080/07256868.2020.1806805