Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Co-sleeping assemblages: What shapes the co-sleeping practices in mother-baby dyads in Aotearoa New Zealand?
View through CrossRef
<p><strong>Co-sleeping, where caregiver-infant dyads share a sleeping surface, is a customary practice across many global cultures, including within Māori and Pacifica communities in Aotearoa New Zealand. Although co-sleeping offers many potential health benefits, such as strengthening mother-baby bonding, facilitating breastfeeding, and promoting both maternal and infant wellbeing, it challenges dominant Western norms and raises concerns about Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). The limited research and absence of clear guidelines have created a dilemma for mothers wishing to co-sleep safely. This study addresses that gap by exploring co-sleeping practices among 16 mother-baby dyads in Aotearoa New Zealand. Drawing on feminist new materialism and assemblage theory, data were collected through in-depth interviews and two-week digital diaries to capture the dynamic nature of co-sleeping encounters. A new materialist analytical approach revealed that co-sleeping emerges not solely from individual choice but from the complex interplay of material arrangements, embodied experiences, and institutional forces. Three key paradoxical dynamics emerged from the analysis. First, vigilant rest describes how mothers report improved sleep quality through heightened awareness of their infants. Second, the safety paradox illustrates how mothers develop sophisticated safety strategies while contending with conflicting healthcare advice. Third, the good mother paradox exposes tensions between emerging embodied expertise and pervasive social pressures, which affect both maternal wellbeing and the nurturing of strong mother-baby bonds. Overall, the findings demonstrate that co-sleeping is a dynamic process of negotiation among bodies, spaces, materials, and social forces, not a simple choice between separate or shared sleep. Mothers actively reshape their practices through creative adaptations and resistance, challenging regulatory pressures while fostering deeper maternal bonds and wellbeing. These insights inform both theoretical discussions on early parenting practices and practical, culturally responsive strategies for infant sleep safety within Aotearoa New Zealand’s unique healthcare and cultural context.</strong></p>
Title: Co-sleeping assemblages: What shapes the co-sleeping practices in mother-baby dyads in Aotearoa New Zealand?
Description:
<p><strong>Co-sleeping, where caregiver-infant dyads share a sleeping surface, is a customary practice across many global cultures, including within Māori and Pacifica communities in Aotearoa New Zealand.
Although co-sleeping offers many potential health benefits, such as strengthening mother-baby bonding, facilitating breastfeeding, and promoting both maternal and infant wellbeing, it challenges dominant Western norms and raises concerns about Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS).
The limited research and absence of clear guidelines have created a dilemma for mothers wishing to co-sleep safely.
This study addresses that gap by exploring co-sleeping practices among 16 mother-baby dyads in Aotearoa New Zealand.
Drawing on feminist new materialism and assemblage theory, data were collected through in-depth interviews and two-week digital diaries to capture the dynamic nature of co-sleeping encounters.
A new materialist analytical approach revealed that co-sleeping emerges not solely from individual choice but from the complex interplay of material arrangements, embodied experiences, and institutional forces.
Three key paradoxical dynamics emerged from the analysis.
First, vigilant rest describes how mothers report improved sleep quality through heightened awareness of their infants.
Second, the safety paradox illustrates how mothers develop sophisticated safety strategies while contending with conflicting healthcare advice.
Third, the good mother paradox exposes tensions between emerging embodied expertise and pervasive social pressures, which affect both maternal wellbeing and the nurturing of strong mother-baby bonds.
Overall, the findings demonstrate that co-sleeping is a dynamic process of negotiation among bodies, spaces, materials, and social forces, not a simple choice between separate or shared sleep.
Mothers actively reshape their practices through creative adaptations and resistance, challenging regulatory pressures while fostering deeper maternal bonds and wellbeing.
These insights inform both theoretical discussions on early parenting practices and practical, culturally responsive strategies for infant sleep safety within Aotearoa New Zealand’s unique healthcare and cultural context.
</strong></p>.
Related Results
BABY MASSAGE DAN BABY SWIMMING LEBIH BERPENGARUH DARI BABY MASSAGE DAN BABY GYM TERHADAP KUALITAS TIDUR BAYI USIA 3-6 BULAN
BABY MASSAGE DAN BABY SWIMMING LEBIH BERPENGARUH DARI BABY MASSAGE DAN BABY GYM TERHADAP KUALITAS TIDUR BAYI USIA 3-6 BULAN
<div class="WordSection1"><p align="center"><strong>ABSTRAK</strong></p><p>Kualitas tidur bayi sangat berpengaruh pada pertumbuhan bayi. Untuk m...
Playing Pregnancy: The Ludification and Gamification of Expectant Motherhood in Smartphone Apps
Playing Pregnancy: The Ludification and Gamification of Expectant Motherhood in Smartphone Apps
IntroductionLike other forms of embodiment, pregnancy has increasingly become subject to representation and interpretation via digital technologies. Pregnancy and the unborn entity...
Anaemia among mother-child dyads in India: trends, drivers, and future projections
Anaemia among mother-child dyads in India: trends, drivers, and future projections
AbstractAnaemia among mothers and their children is a widespread public health challenge with profound consequences for individuals and societies. While anaemia has been studied se...
The Women Who Don’t Get Counted
The Women Who Don’t Get Counted
Photo by Hédi Benyounes on Unsplash
ABSTRACT
The current incarceration facilities for the growing number of women are depriving expecting mothers of adequate care cruci...
Use of Sleeping Medication and Quality of Life among Older Women who Report Sleeping Difficulty
Use of Sleeping Medication and Quality of Life among Older Women who Report Sleeping Difficulty
Objective: To estimate the proportion of older women who report sleeping difficulties and/or use sleeping medication; and to identify associated factors. Method: Cross sectional su...
Social complementary dyads: historical trends of evolution
Social complementary dyads: historical trends of evolution
Subject of research: "social complementary dyads" as a socio-psychological phenomenon. The object is social groups as socio-psychological phenomena, the subject is small social gro...
Building resilient coastlines: A comprehensive physics-based tsunami hazard model for Aotearoa New Zealand
Building resilient coastlines: A comprehensive physics-based tsunami hazard model for Aotearoa New Zealand
Tsunamis have the potential to cause catastrophic damage to coastal communities. In Aotearoa New Zealand, where 3.5 million people reside within 5 km of the coast, the threat of ex...
Reviewing Commercial Transnational Surrogacy: Lessons for Aotearoa New Zealand
Reviewing Commercial Transnational Surrogacy: Lessons for Aotearoa New Zealand
<p><b>Commercial transnational surrogacy provides those who experience infertility an opportunity to have a child of their ‘own genetic make-up.’ Gestational surrogacy,...

