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A sociological investigation into the relationship between work and family life of seafarers who pass through the port city of Durban.

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Date

2014

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Abstract

This paper seeks to explore how the seafarer’s long and regular absence from home affects both their work and family lives. In so doing the strategies that seafarers adopt to cope with their long absence from home and their extended time on the ship is sociologically understood. Both men and women from developing and developed countries join the Maritime industry as seafarers on a daily basis. Statistics indicate that only 2% of all seafarers today are women who are largely concentrated in the cruise and ferries sector. They have been relegated to gendered positions on these ships. For instance, women occupy positions such as being part of the hotel staff or cabin stewards, which have been previously and historically considered to be work for women while the men occupy jobs that are considered to be masculine and more important. While these seafarers enter the profession as both ratings and officers, the latter is a skilled professional worker more likely from a developed country. Ratings are often from poorer developing countries their labour is cheaper. Seafarers at all levels engage in the industry for a variety of reasons; some are forced into a life at sea to eke out a living; while others spend years training to prepare for a career at sea. Seafarers while working spend six weeks to nine months on board ships and are separated from their family.

Description

Master of Social Sciences in Sociology. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2014.

Keywords

Theses--Sociology., Sailors--Civil status., Women sailors., Seafaring life--South Africa--eThekwini Municipality Metropolitan.

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