Noticeable behaviors, activities, decisions, and techniques that are part and parcel of the parenting process implemented by parents to socialize and care for children (Liang, Fuller, & Singer, 2000; Bornstein, Hahn, & Haynes, 2011).
Published in Chapter:
Parenting Practices in Botswana: A Nexus of Legal and Sociocultural Discourses
Poloko Nuggert Ntshwarang (University of Botswana, Botswana) and Odireleng Mildred Shehu (University of Botswana, Botswana)
Copyright: © 2020
|Pages: 18
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-2940-9.ch011
Abstract
As in other Sub-Saharan countries, the legal reforms that occur in Botswana have significant effects on family functioning and how parenting occurs. Parenting practices such as strategies for supporting, monitoring, and disciplining children have significant effects on children's physical, social, psychological, emotional, and behavioral wellbeing. An important section of the structural system that affects parenting practices is the law. Botswana's Children's Act is an overriding law that informs any children's policy and program as well as parenting behaviors. Children's laws in the country are influenced by both socio-cultural discourses as well as the international bodies that Botswana is signatory to such as the Convention for the Rights of the Child (CRC). The authors adopt a critical discourse analysis (CDA) to examine how Botswana's Children's Act of 2009 contributes to parenting practices in the country and the impact of socio-cultural discourses in understanding and implementing the act. Implications for social work practice, research, and policy are highlighted.