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Studying migration-related family separation


Problem:

Introduction and Background of the Problem

Labor migration has become a defining feature of Jamaica's economic and social landscape, generating economic opportunities for households while simultaneously creating psychological and relational challenges for spouses who remain in the country of origin. This pattern is reflected in the scale of Jamaican emigration, with approximately 1.3 million Jamaican-born individuals residing abroad in 2016, representing roughly 45% of the resident population (Nwankwo & Govia, 2022; Das et al., 2021). More recent estimates indicate that over 1.1 million Jamaican-born individuals were living outside the country in 2020, representing about 39.7% of the national population (Di Giorgio et al., 2024). One of the most significant ways migration affects households in the country of origin is through remittances, which represent a primary mechanism through which overseas employment supports household livelihoods in Jamaica (Chikanda et al., 2025; Das et al., 2021). Approximately 57% of Jamaican households receive remittances from relatives living overseas (Romero et al., 2023), demonstrating the central role of migration-related income in household survival strategies. One factor contributing to the growth in remittance inflows between 2005 and 2015 was the increasing participation of lower-skilled workers in the Government of Jamaica's Overseas Work Programmes, which expanded opportunities for temporary labor migration and remittance sending (Chikanda et al., 2025). While these migration arrangements provide important economic benefits for households, they often require extended periods of spousal separation as family members migrate abroad for employment.

Collectively, these migration patterns indicate that labor-related family separation has become a defining feature of Jamaican family life, as families pursue economic opportunities abroad while maintaining relationships across geographic distance (Jaupart, 2023).

Research indicates that spouses who remain in Jamaica while their partners work abroad may experience elevated psychological and physical health symptoms, including diminished marital satisfaction and increased reports of physical health problems relative to spouses in non-migrant households (Nwankwo & Govia, 2022). These psychological and relational challenges are further documented in migration research, which indicates that prolonged migration-related marital separation is associated with depressive symptoms, anxiety, stress, loneliness, reduced marital satisfaction, and other psychological and relational difficulties among left-behind spouses (Niu & Wang, 2024; Nguyen et al., 2025; Rai et al., 2023). The development of culturally responsive psychological services for transnational families may therefore be enhanced by understanding how left-behind spouses perceive and cope with migration-related separation (Nguyen et al., 2025).

In the context of the above content, suggest a very brief contextual sentence that can strengthen the introduction by explaining why Jamaica is an important case for studying migration-related family separation which can help to justify the national context as a meaningful case study. Need Assignment Help?

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Other Subject: Studying migration-related family separation
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