Listen "S3E1 - When Work Keeps Families Apart"
Episode Synopsis
In Atlantic Canada, long-distance commuting for work is a daily reality for many families, particularly those living in rural areas. Families can be separated for weeks, months, or sometimes even years, with loved ones working away and their families keeping life moving along at home.
Atlantic Canadian families living with long-distance commutes tend to face many of the same challenges. Many have developed formal and informal ways of dealing with the, often invisible, pressures of separation. In this episode of Rural Routes, we speak to community leaders, researchers, and people with lived experience about how long-distance commuting can affect families, about the networks and supports that those people are building and about ways these families and those who serve them might benefit from more support.
This episode of Rural Routes is based on interviews with researchers, mobile workers and their family members done at the Families, Work and Mobility Symposium in Prince Edward Island. The symposium happened because so many people lead organizer Christina Murray spoke with during her research told her, “I wish there was an opportunity for people to come together to talk about this issue and how it impacts me, my family and my community.”
Atlantic Canadian families living with long-distance commutes tend to face many of the same challenges. Many have developed formal and informal ways of dealing with the, often invisible, pressures of separation. In this episode of Rural Routes, we speak to community leaders, researchers, and people with lived experience about how long-distance commuting can affect families, about the networks and supports that those people are building and about ways these families and those who serve them might benefit from more support.
This episode of Rural Routes is based on interviews with researchers, mobile workers and their family members done at the Families, Work and Mobility Symposium in Prince Edward Island. The symposium happened because so many people lead organizer Christina Murray spoke with during her research told her, “I wish there was an opportunity for people to come together to talk about this issue and how it impacts me, my family and my community.”
More episodes of the podcast Rural Routes
S3E12-Along The Baccalieu Trail
19/03/2021
S3E11-Rural and island responses to COVID-19
12/05/2020
S3E10 - Rural Trauma
06/05/2020
S3E9-The Future of Rural Work
12/02/2020
S3E8-Rural-Urban Interaction
25/11/2019
S3E7-Rural Innovation in Ireland
08/07/2019
S3E5-Rural Media
30/01/2019
S3E4 - Islands And Their Universities
15/01/2019
S3E3 - The Country Mouse And The City Mouse
13/11/2018
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