Brújula Home

Institutional repository of the Universidad Loyola

View Item 
  •   Brújula Home
  • PRODUCCIÓN CIENTÍFICA Y TRANSFERENCIA
  • Departamento Psicología
  • Artículos
  • View Item
  •   Brújula Home
  • PRODUCCIÓN CIENTÍFICA Y TRANSFERENCIA
  • Departamento Psicología
  • Artículos
  • View Item
    • español
    • English
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Browse

All of BrújulaCommunities and CollectionsAuthorsTitlesKeywordsAuthor profilesThis CollectionAuthorsTitlesKeywords

My Account

Login

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

Añadido Recientemente

Novedades
Repository
How to publish
Visibility
FAQs

Collaborating with transnational families: Learning from the experiences of family caretakers, educators, psychologists, and spiritual leaders in Honduras

Author:
Gemignani, MarcoUniversidad Loyola Authority; Hernández-Albújar, YolandaUniversidad Loyola Authority; Larrinaga-Bidegain, Nerea
URI:
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12412/7239
ISSN:
0091-0562
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajcp.70051
Date:
2026-01-31
Keyword(s):

Care

Caretakers

Family transnationality

Migrants

Migration

Parenting

Abstract:

This manuscript centers on the experiences of caretakers of minors in Honduran transnational families (TNFs) in which one or both parents emigrated, and of the schoolteachers, professional psychologists, and spiritual leaders working with these families. We report on the participants' knowledge and learned lessons, which we place in dialog with the interdisciplinary literature on TNFs in sociology, psychology, gender studies, and cultural studies. Through a participatory methodology, we collaborated with the participants to develop a series of guidelines based on their experiences. We have structured this manuscript in four intersecting themes: (1) Affectivity related to parental migration and its consequences; (2) Community dimensions and actors; (3) Family arrangements and agreements; and (4) Family communication at a distance. These guidelines and insights may prove helpful to current, prospective, and past TNFs who may see their experiences reflected in this manuscript, and to professionals working with TNFs. The participants' knowledges and suggestions can be instrumental in understanding and professionally supporting these families' well-being, care, and unity.

This manuscript centers on the experiences of caretakers of minors in Honduran transnational families (TNFs) in which one or both parents emigrated, and of the schoolteachers, professional psychologists, and spiritual leaders working with these families. We report on the participants' knowledge and learned lessons, which we place in dialog with the interdisciplinary literature on TNFs in sociology, psychology, gender studies, and cultural studies. Through a participatory methodology, we collaborated with the participants to develop a series of guidelines based on their experiences. We have structured this manuscript in four intersecting themes: (1) Affectivity related to parental migration and its consequences; (2) Community dimensions and actors; (3) Family arrangements and agreements; and (4) Family communication at a distance. These guidelines and insights may prove helpful to current, prospective, and past TNFs who may see their experiences reflected in this manuscript, and to professionals working with TNFs. The participants' knowledges and suggestions can be instrumental in understanding and professionally supporting these families' well-being, care, and unity.

Show full item record
Collections
  • Artículos
Files in this item
Thumbnail
American J of Comm Psychol - 2026 - Gemignani - Collaborating with transnational families Learning from the experiences of.pdf (1.427Mb)
Share
Export to Mendeley
Statistics
Usage statistics
Metrics and citations  
Go to Brújula home

Universidad Loyola

Library

Contact

Facebook Loyola BibliotecaTwitter Loyola Biblioteca

The content of the Repository is protected with a Creative Commons license:

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional

Creative Commons Image