SW 680 Filipino Immigration
SW 680 Filipino Immigration
SW 680 Filipino Immigration
FILIPINO IMMIGRANTS
By the late 20th century, Filipinos became one of the fastest growing immigrant population in the United States. By the early 21st century, they constituted the 3rd largest Asian immigrant group in the United States.
Why Filipinos?
Cheaper Philippines was a U.S. colony Viewed as supplements to Japanese Agricultural country Illiterate and docile Hardworking and industrious
A total of 126,147 Filipinos came to Hawaii through the H.S.P.A. during four time periods between 1906 to 1946, mostly Ilocanos and Visayans all indentured to a three-year contract. Within a span of 37 years, these Filipino recruits or Sakadas are known to have planted the roots of Filipino experience in Hawaii.
Sakadas lived a life of segregation at work and on the plantations. They got the lowest jobs, and were held down as unskilled laborers for most of their lives in Hawaii. Maintaining a normal life was difficult with their wives and children back in the Philippines. Their main goal was to work hard, save money, and return home quickly to their families. The uneven men to women ratio created many social problems, including wife stealing and fighting over women. Gambling was also an issue with Filipinos, as they had hopes to win big.
In Hawaii, the first-generation Filipino men, women, and children were treated as the lowest of the unskilled labor. Some Sakadas were beaten with sticks by lunas, or plantation work supervisors for not responding to their satisfaction. They were stereotyped as being oversexed, hot-blooded, and quick tempered. H.S.P.A. policies also discouraged bringing the wives and children of the men because they believed families on plantation wages would be costly. Moreover, higher education was not encouraged for plantation children.
A clear example of racist stereotyping of immigrant Filipinos to Hawaii are evident in the 1926 book Temperament and Race by psychologists Porteus and Babcock. Some of the data for the book came from twenty-five key informants or judges, all of whom were white, who provided social ratings of six major races in Hawaii, significantly not including whites perhaps because they were assumed to provide the normative psychological standard. With regard to Filipinos, Porteus and Babcock contended:
"Summing up these characteristics we may say that the Filipinos represent a fine example of a race in an adolescent stage of development. They exhibit all the signs of imbalance and temporary mal-adjustment that many adolescents show. The marks of their departure from the normal balance of maturity are to be seen in their egocentric attitude, in their rather obtrusive habits and desire for personal recognition, in their super-sensitiveness, love of display, and noisy self-expression . . . Obviously, these defects must interfere seriously with good judgment and a balanced and sane reaction to affairs in general."
POEA connects to the world, and, in partnership with all stakeholders, facilitates the generation and preservation of decent jobs for Filipino migrant workers, promotes their protection and advocates their smooth reintegration into Philippine society.
1. Through the POEA, the Philippines developed an institutional framework to facilitate the placement and processing of workers who desire employment abroad. 2. POEA provides information about the availability of workers and licenses Filipino employment agencies as partners. 3. Employment agencies interact with companies abroad for private sector jobs. 4. Public Sector, a special branch of the POEA focuses on placement in positions with foreign governments, most commonly in public hospitals or with state airlines. 5. The POEA was designed to be a one-stop shopping center for those desiring to work abroad in either the public or private sector.
EXPORTING PEOPLE
Overseas workers, with more than 8,579,000 million Filipinos living and working abroad (2012 Philippine population 103,775,002).
30% of all workers on seas cargo and in the cruise ship industries are Filipinos, a startling figure for a country that is home to less than 1.5% of the worlds population.
195 of the worlds 220 countries and territories hosts at least one OFW (Overseas Filipino Worker) as of 2009.
As the country becomes increasingly dependent upon remittances to disguise its economic shortcomings, it grows ever more vulnerable to economic shocks beyond its shores.
Few economic downturns have been as deep, as multi-sectoral, or as global as the one that began in 2008, affecting the wealthier countries to which Filipinos emigrate. This has led to fears that large numbers of OFWs and those with resident status abroad will lose their jobs, forcing them to reduce the level of remittances they send home or eliminate them entirely.
Filipino Americans
Lowest poverty rate among Asian Americans; have a median household income that is higher than the White American population and that ranks as the second highest among Asian Americans; have the second highest English proficiency rate among all Asian Americans; and are the only Asian American ethnic group with a history of being colonized by the United States and are therefore highly familiar with American culture Furthermore, recent research suggests that many Filipino Americans may desire to replace Filipino cultural values with American cultural values because of colonial mentality, a form of internalized oppression characterized by a preference for anything American and rejection of anything Filipino.
Social Work Practice: The Filipino Population in Hawaii Implications and Considerations
Growing Filipino population Acculturation in Filipino immigrants Acculturation is a process of culture learning and behavioral adaptation that can take place when individuals are exposed to a new culture and is also described as a learning process because it usually involves a change in behavior. Several studies on ethnic immigrant populations have posited that acculturation influences health outcomes as they learned new behaviors. Cultural mistrust is related to lower likelihood of seeking professional psychological help. Cultural mistrust predicted variance in mental health help-seeking attitudes that are not accounted for by income, generational status, loss of face, and adherence to Asian cultural values.
Characteristics grouped to obtain a clear picture of what comprises the concept of acculturation among Filipino immigrants.
The defining attributes are as follows:
Interactions between two cultures. A learning process that involves the acquisition of the English language and exposure to a culture different from ones own. A process involving changes in cultural beliefs, values, and practices to those of the new culture, while maintaining some of the values, beliefs, and practices from the original culture. Adaptation to a new socio-cultural context that involves adapting to the U.S. mainstream.
References A Century of Challenge and Change: The Filipino American Story. (2006). Retrieved from http://www.filam.si.edu/curriculum/about-project.html. David, E. J. R. (2010). Cultural mistrust and mental health help-seeking attitudes among Filipino Americans. Asian American Journal of Psychology, 1(1), 57-66. doi:10.1037/a0018814. Filipino Culture in Hawaii on BITV. (2010). Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7YWy_gcxhtA. McDermott, John F., Andrade, Naleen Naupaka.(2011). The Filipinos. People and Cultures of Hawaii, The Evolution of Culture and Ethnicity. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. pp. 201-219.
Okamura, Jonathan (2010). From Running Amok to Eating Dogs: A Century of Misrepresenting Filipino Americans in Hawaii. Ethnic and Racial Studies. Vol. 33, DOI:10.1080/01419870903055993.
Serafica, R. (2011). Concept Analysis of Acculturation in Filipino Immigrants Within Health Context. Nursing Forum, 46(3), 128-136. doi:10.1111/j.1744-6198.2011.00231.x.