Parental Rights and the Temporality of Attachment: Law, Kinship, and Child Welfare in Japan Journal Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • AbstractThis article explores the legal norms and regulatory mechanisms in Japan that structure child welfare placement decisions, focusing specifically on the legal category of “parental rights.” It is suggested that the ways child welfare officers and caregivers understand the concept of “rights”—both those of the biological parent(s) and the child—construe kinship relationships as problems to be managed, but with a particular orientation toward what is called in the article the temporality of attachment. Child welfare caseworkers’ understandings of legal categories, processes, and forms of documentation (such as the Japanese family registry) produce particular forms of kinship that prioritize a child's possible future relationship with an absent parent, above and beyond the day-to-day relationships children might develop with alternative caregivers such as foster parents. Despite the fact that the author's Japanese interlocutors often described kinship as an immutable relationship of blood ties, the author shows how kinship is in fact produced through specific encounters between (mostly absent) parents and their children, child welfare caseworkers, and foster and institutional caregivers, scaffolded by their engagement with legal and bureaucratic regimes. The article explores what parenthood means within Japanese child welfare, both as a temporalized form of relationality and as a set of legally structured claims to the right to care.

publication date

  • August 1, 2021

Date in CU Experts

  • February 1, 2022 10:37 AM

Full Author List

  • Goldfarb KE

author count

  • 1

Other Profiles

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 1067-9847

Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)

  • 1527-8271

Additional Document Info

start page

  • 469

end page

  • 493

volume

  • 29

issue

  • 3