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Silliman Journal

Margaret Helen Udarbe-Alvarez, Ph.D., Editor


Warlito S. Caturay Jr., MA, Associate Editor
Ian Rosales Casocot, BMC, Production Editor
Nenith P. Calibo, Business Manager

Editorial Board

Myrish Cadapan-Antonio, LlM


Jane Annette L. Belarmino, MBA
Gina Fontejon-Bonior, MA
Jose Edwin C. Cubelo, Ph.D.
Roy Olsen D. De Leon, MS
Theresa A. Guino-o, MS
Enrique G. Oracion, Ph.D.
Muriel O. Montenegro, Ph.D.
Betsy Joy B. Tan, Ph.D.
Lorna T. Yso, MLS

Overseas Editorial Board

Dennis Patrick McCann, Ph.D.


Alston Professor of Bible and Religion, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Georgia, USA

Ceres E. Pioquinto, Ph.D.


English Lecturer, HMZ Academy/Dialogica Zug, Baar, Switzerland

Laurie H. Raymundo, Ph.D.


Director, University of Guam Marine Laboratory, Mangilao, GU, USA

Lester Edwin J. Ruiz, Ph.D.


Director, Accreditation and Institutional Evaluation,
Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada,
The Commission on Accrediting, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

Dr. Margaret Helen Udarbe-Alvarez, Chair


Volume 52 Number 1 | January to June 2011
Prof. Ma. Cecilia Gastardo-Conaco, Ph.D.
Professor, University of the Philippines Psychology Department
Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines

Prof. Nelly Z. Limbadan, Ph.D.


Department of Psychology, Ateneo de Davao University,
Davao City, Philippines

Prof. Lorna Peña-Reyes Makil, MA


Sociologist, Dumaguete City, Philippines

Aileen Maypa, Ph.D.


Zoology Department, University of Hawai’i at Manoa
Honolulu, Hawai’i, USA
BOARD
Prof. Dennis P. McCann, Ph.D.
Alston Professor of Bible and Religion, Agnes Scott College
OF
Decatur, Georgia, USA REVIEWERS
Prof. Enrique G. Oracion, Ph.D.
Director, University Research and Development Center
Silliman University, Dumaguete City, Philippines

Prof. Laurie Raymundo, Ph.D.


Director, University of Guam Marine Laboratory
Mangilao, Guam, USA

Prof. Reynaldo Y. Rivera, Ph.D.


Dean, School of Public Affairs and Governance
Silliman University, Dumaguete City, Philippines

Prof. Ma. Caridad Tarroja, Ph.D.


Associate Professor, De la Salle University—Manila
Philippines

Prof. Wilma Tejero, MBA


Assistant Professor, College of Business Administration
Silliman University, Dumaguete City, Philippines
Silliman Journal
Volume 52 Number 1 2011
The Silliman Journal is published twice a year under the auspices of Silliman
University, Dumaguete City, Philippines. Entered as second class mail matter at
Dumaguete City Post Office on September 1, 1954.

Copyright © 2011 by the individual authors


and Silliman Journal

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in


any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording
or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from
the authors or the publisher.

ISSN 0037-5284

Opinions and facts contained in the articles published in this issue of Silliman Journal
are the sole responsibility of the individual authors and not of the Editors, the Editorial
Board, Silliman Journal, or Silliman University.

Annual subscription rates are at PhP600 for local subscribers, and $35 for overseas
subscribers. Subscription and orders for current and back issues should be addressed to

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Other inquiries regarding editorial policies and contributions may be addressed to


the Silliman Journal Business Manager or the Editor at the following email address:
[email protected].

Or go to the Silliman Journal website at www.su.edu.ph/sillimanjournal

Cover and book design by Ian Rosales Casocot


Cover painting, “Siquijor Beach in the Twilight” by Razceljan Salvarita, courtesy of the artist.
Printing by SU Printing Press, Dumaguete City
Editorial Notes
Margaret Helen F. Udarbe | 15

Lost in Translation?
Challenges in Using Psychological
Tests in the Philippines
Allan B. I. Bernardo | 21

The Literary Facebook:


Notes on the Possibilities of
Literature in Internet
Social Networking
Ian Rosales Casocot | 46

The Constraints School Toward Good


CONTENTS
Local Governance:
Local Governments of the
Philippines Circa 2001—2010
Aser B. Javier | 62

Potential Impact of Climate Change


on Marine Mammal Biodiversity
of Southeast Asia
Ma. Louella L. Dolar and
Edna R. Sabater | 91

Socio-Economic Monitoring of Fishers’


Conditions in Selected Sites of Guimaras
Affected By the 2006 Oil Spill
Rodelio F. Subade and
Evelyn Jugado-Galero | 114
Participatory Conservation in the
Philippines: The Case of Luyang Mangrove
Reserve in Siquijor, Central Philippines
143 | Marla R. Chassels and Abner A. Bucol

Tagapagligtas, Ilaw, Kasama: Religiosity


Among Filipino Domestic Workers
in Hong Kong
155 | Betty Cernol-McCann, Margaret Helen U.
Alvarez, and Dennis P. McCann

READERS Forum

The Body Politic and Diaspora in Theological


Education: An Introduction to the
Conversation with Lester J. Ruiz
191 | Muriel Orevillo-Montenegro

Recovering the “Body Politic”: Racialized and


Gendered Diaspora in Accredited Graduate
Theological Education
201 | Lester Edwin J. Ruiz

“This Is My Body”: The Theopolitics of


(Re)Inscription
227 | karl james e. villarmea

Graduate Theological Education in and for a


(Racialized and Gendered) Diaspora
230 | Dennis P. McCann

Integral Liberation in U.S. Theological


Education: Is it Possible?
238 | Mark Lewis Taylor
Notes

The Catalogue of Small Things


Compiled Responses From
Rowena Tiempo Torrevillas and
J. Neil C. Garcia by Ian Rosales Casocot | 255

Additions to the Avifauna of


Bantayan Island, Cebu Province,
Philippines
Abner A. Bucol | 263

Restocked Giant Clams (Family


Tridacnidae) Enhance Community
Structure of a Philippine Coral Reef
Angel C. Alcala, Ely L. Alcala,
and A. C. Cordero | 265

BOOK Review

Nooks of the Human Heart:


On Ian Rosales Casocot’s
Beautiful Accidents: Stories
Alana Leilani C. Narciso | 271
NOTICE TO AUTHORS
PUBLICATION GUIDELINES

Silliman Journal welcomes submission of scholarly papers, research


studies, brief reports in all fields from both Philippine and foreign
scholars, but papers must have some relevance to the Philippines, Asia,
or the Pacific. All submissions are refereed.
Silliman Journal is especially receptive to the work of new authors.
Articles should be products of research taken in its broadest sense and
should make an original contribution to their respective fields. Authors
are advised to keep in mind that Silliman Journal has a general and
international readership, and to structure their papers accordingly.
Silliman Journal does not accept papers which are currently
under consideration by other journals or which have been previously
published elsewhere. The submission of an article implies that, if
accepted, the author agrees that the paper can be published exclusively
by the journal concerned.
Manuscripts of up to 20 pages, including tables and references,
should conform to the conventions of format and style exemplified in
a typical issue of Silliman Journal. Documentation of sources should
be disciplined-based. Whenever possible, citations should appear in
the body of the paper, holding footnotes to a minimum. Pictures or
illustrations will be accepted only when absolutely necessary. All
articles must be accompanied by an abstract and keywords and must
use gender-fair language.
Silliman Journal likewise welcomes submissions of “Notes,”
which generally are briefer and more tentative than full-length
articles. Reports on work-in-progress, queries, updates, reports of
impressions rather than research, responses to the works of others,
even reminiscences are appropriate here.
Silliman Journal also accepts for publication book reviews and
review articles.
Manuscripts should be submitted electronically in one Microsoft
Word file (including title page, figures, tables, etc. in the file),
preferably in RTF (.rtf). Please send one copy of the manuscript as an
e-mail attachment, with a covering message addressed to the Editor:
[email protected]
The Editor will endeavor to acknowledge all submissions,

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


consider them promptly, and notify the authors as soon as these have
been refereed. Each author of a full-length article is entitled to one
complimentary copy of the journal plus 20 off-print copies of her/his
published paper. Additional copies are available by arrangement with
the Editor or Business Manager before the issue goes to press.
Other inquiries regarding editorial policies and contributions may
be addressed to the Business Manager at [email protected], or the
Editor at [email protected].
SILLIMAN JOURNAL
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SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


15
“Translation is entirely mysterious. Increasingly I have
felt that the art of writing is itself translating, or more
like translating than it is like anything else. What is the
other text, the original? I have no answer. I suppose it
is the source, the deep sea where ideas swim, and one
catches them in nets of words and swings them shining
into the boat … where in this metaphor they die and get
canned and eaten in sandwiches.”

Ursula K. Le Guin

“Humour is the first of the gifts to perish in a


foreign tongue.“

Virginia Woolf

EDITORIAL
NOTES

W
elcome to this issue of Silliman Journal
with cover art, “Siquijor Beach in the
Twilight,” by Dumaguete/Bacolod-
based painter and performance artist Razceljan
Salvarita.
Our first article is by outstanding Filipino
social psychologist and researcher Allan
Bernardo of the De la Salle University-Manila.
In “Lost In Translation?” Allan questions the
validity of foreign-made psychological tests
for Filipino respondents, discusses issues of
translation and equivalence, and suggests

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


16 EDITORial notes

possible courses of action by the Filipino psychology community.


Then, self-proclaimed poster boy for the Facebook generation
Ian Rosales Casocot describes “The Literary Facebook”—“a virtual
community where things happen.” Writer Ian solicited other writers’
thoughts on FB with two questions: How do you use Facebook as a
writer? What do you think Facebook means for readers? The responses
provide varied and interesting insights, whether or not you love social
networking.
Third, in writing about “The Constraints School toward Good
Local Governance,” Aser Javier of the University of the Philippines
at Los Baños cites Goldratt’s theory: “the constraints school is like a
chain with a weak link such that in any complex system at any point in
time, there is most often one aspect that limits its ability to achieve the
goal.” Further, “for that system to attain a significant improvement, the
constraint must be identified and the whole system must be managed
with it in mind.” Aser presents three cases to show that three-level
dynamics influence the shape of local institutions.
The next three papers relate to important environmental issues. The
first paper, entitled “Potential Impact of Climate Change on Marine
Mammal Biodiversity of Southeast Asia,” is by biologists Louella Dolar
and Edna Sabater. The study identifies numerous threatened species
as well as numerous threats, including “high human population
growth rates typical of the coastal areas in Southeast Asia, increased
dependence on the ocean as a source of food as the intensifying El Niño
brings drought into inland areas, and lack of regulation or enforcement
of fishery and conservation laws.” The second paper, by Rodelio
Subade and Evelyn Galero, observes that the socioeconomic life of a
fishing community in Guimaras, Central Philippines was drastically
affected by an oil spill in 2006, and suggests how both local and national
government may provide assistance. Third, the case of a mangrove
reserve in Siquijor Island is used to illustrate participatory conservation
in the Philippines. The study was done by scientist-researchers Marla
Chassels and Abner Bucol.
The final full-length article by psychologists Betty McCann
and Margaret Udarbe and philosopher-theologian Dennis McCann
investigates religiosity among Filipino domestic workers in Hong
Kong, finding that, among other results, the God they know is primarily
Tagapagligtas (Savior), Ilaw (Light), and Kasama (Companion).

Readers Forum

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


Margaret Udarbe-Alvarez 17

The SJ Readers Forum IV is ushered in by Editorial Board member


Muriel O. Montenegro who describes the article under review—
“Recovering the ‘Body Politic’: Racialized and Gendered Diaspora
in Accredited Graduate Theological Education,” by SJ frequent
contributor and member of our overseas editorial board, Lester Edwin
Ruiz. I wish to thank Lester personally for allowing this paper to be
read and critiqued prior to its publication in SJ. The paper is published
elsewhere in similar form and appears here courtesy of Regnum Press.
I am also extremely grateful to Karl Villarmea who is currently doing
post-doctoral studies at the Chicago Theological Seminary, Dennis
McCann (another one of our hardworking overseas editorial board
members), and Mark Lewis Taylor of Princeton Theological Seminary
for their critiques of Lester’s paper.

Notes Section

The Notes section begins with the lovely “The Catalogue of Small
Things” where Ian Rosales Casocot has put together a dialogue between
the writers Rowena Tiempo-Torrevillas and J. Neil C. Garcia—engaged
in what Neil refers to as “these altogether lovely bonsai moments.”
This first essay is followed by two short science reports: “Additions
to the avifauna of Bantayan Island, Cebu Province, Philippines” by
regular contributor Abner A. Bucol and “Restocked Giant Clams
(Family Tridacnidae) Enhance Community Structure of a Philippine
Coral Reef” by Dr. Angel C. Alcala, Ely L. Alcala, and A. C. Cordero.

Book Review

The lone book review in this issue is by Assistant Professor in English


at Silliman University, Alana Leilani Cabrera-Narciso, who writes
about Beautiful Accidents: Stories (University of the Philippines Press,
2011) by her colleague at the Department of English and Literature,
the writer-essayist Ian Rosales Casocot. The book itself is a collection
of short stories set in the author’s home Philippine province of Negros
Oriental, particularly the city of Dumaguete, stories that, according to
Alana, refuse to be categorized … as obstinate as accidents.

Acknowledgments

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


18

I would like to thank our contributors and reviewers for this issue
as well as our editorial board and my editorial staff. Putting an issue
together is always stressful, but it’s also exciting. I am especially happy
with the variety you should find in this issue. It reminds me of one of
Ovid’s sayings because we treat just about “a thousand dispositions in
a thousand ways.”It keeps the humdrum of an academic life interesting.

Margaret Helen F. Udarbe


Editor

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


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VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


20

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


Lost In Translation?
Challenges in Using
Psychological Tests
in the Philippines

Allan B. I. Bernardo
De La Salle University
Manila, Philippines

Filipino psychologists often use foreign-made psychological tests


in English in their professional practice and in research. The paper
raises questions on the validity of such tests for use with different
Filipino respondents. Drawing from international standards for
translating and adapting tests, the various levels of equivalence
(qualitative and quantitative) between the original tests and their
translations are discussed. The different types and sources of bias
(construct, method, and item biases) that lead to non-equivalent
translations of tests are also explained. The paper then reviews
research on the equivalence of Filipino translations of tests with
their original English versions and points to the strong possibility
that the translations, as well as the English versions of the test
used with Filipino participants, are not equivalent to the original
tests used with the original target populations. The paper ends
with a discussion of possible courses of action and the need for
collective action from different sectors of the Filipino psychology
community to address the concern.

Keywords: psychological tests; translation; equivalence; bias;


language; bilinguals; Philippines

P
sychological tests have long been used in the Philippines—in
the recruitment and selection of employees, in the admission
of students in schools, in diagnosis of psychological and
psychiatric conditions, among others. In recent years, there have
been numerous developments that have institutionalized the use
of psychological tests in legal and official government procedures

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


22 LOST IN TRANSLATION
such as in the diagnosis of psychological incapacity in petitions for
nullification of marriages, diagnosis of whether juvenile offenders
are able to discern whether their actions are right or wrong, among
others. There have been discussions on the possibility of using
psychological tests in other domains like for screening applicants
for oversees contract work, and perhaps half-seriously, for screening
candidates for political positions. In one sense, these developments
recognize the usefulness and validity of psychological testing as a
measure of understanding of some facets of a person’s experience,
and the importance of psychological tests in various aspects of
societal functioning. However, there are concerns regarding whether
these tests are being used properly, and by people who are properly
trained to use such tests.
One specific issue regarding the use of psychological tests in the
Philippines relates to the cross-cultural and cross-linguistic validity
of psychological tests in English that were developed in North
America, Australia, and other English-speaking countries where
most psychological tests are being constructed, validated, published,
and sold. This issue is not specific to the Philippines, and indeed, is
an issue all over the world. As such, there has already been quite a
significant amount of work undertaken to safeguard the integrity of
psychological assessment as a professional and scientific procedure.
Moreover, various standards have been articulated for the use of
psychological tests in cultures and languages other than where
they originated (Hambleton, 2001; Van de Vijver & Tanzer, 2004).
Unfortunately, however, such standards have not been the focus of
much attention in the Philippine context.
In the Philippine context, another important consideration is
the fact that most Filipinos taking psychological tests are either
bilingual or multilingual. Research shows that bilinguals’ responses
to psychological tasks may vary depending on the language used
in the task. In a study looking into perceptions of other people’s
personality Hoffman, Lau, and Johnson (1986) found that Chinese-
English bilinguals from Hong Kong recalled different aspects of a
target person’s personality depending on whether the descriptions
of the person were given in Chinese or in English. When it comes
to retrieval of autobiographical memories, Marian and Neisser
(2000) found that Russian-English bilinguals recalled life experiences
differently depending on whether the elicitation of memories was
done in Russian or in English. Moreover, the intensity of the affect
expressed during the recall of autobiographical memories depended

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


A. B. I. BERNARDO 23
on the language used as well (Marian & Kaushanskaya, 2004). Marian
and Fausey (2006) account for these language effects in the memory-
related psychological processes of bilinguals by proposing a language-
dependent memory system for bilinguals, which is consistent with
various studies showing language-dependent benefits and/or deficits
in cognitive processing of Filipino-English bilinguals (e.g., Bernardo,
1996, 1998, 1999, 2001b, 2002, 2005; Bernardo & Calleja, 2005). Thus,
in administering psychological tests and tasks among Filipino
bilinguals, the language used may sometimes influence how the
respondent performs in the test.
This paper addresses the various issues related to the use of
English-language psychological tests developed in foreign countries
with Filipino respondents, who are presumably at least bilingual
and even possibly multilingual. The paper discusses the different
issues and standards related to the translation of psychological
tests, focusing on issues of equivalence and bias. In discussing these
issues, examples shall be provided involving psychological tests
used with Filipino participants. The paper ends with a series of
recommendations regarding how Filipino psychologists can ensure
the validity and integrity of psychological testing in the Philippines,
as local psychologists continue to use foreign-made, English-language
psychological tests.

General Options for Filipino Psychologists

To preface the discussion on the general options for Filipino


psychologists who wish to use foreign-made psychological tests in
the English language, let us consider this earlier version of the Beck
Depression Inventory (BDI, 1995) which is readily available on the
Internet (see e.g., http://www.ibogaine.desk.nl/graphics/3639b1c_23.
pdf). The BDI is intended to measure whether the respondent is
experiencing depression and to determine the level of depression
(e.g., borderline clinical depression, moderate, severe or extreme
depression). Because of its availability on the Internet, psychologists
and psychology students have often used the BDI for diagnostics
and research. The inventory consists of 21 items referring to different
aspects of behavior (e.g., pessimism, self-dislike, past failures, etc.).
For each item, the respondent is given four options referring to
different experiences regarding the particular aspect of behavior, and
each of the four options corresponds to a score. The respondent’s total

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


24 LOST IN TRANSLATION

score for all 21 items is summed and compared to normed levels of


depression.
Now consider the following item (#11) that refers to agitation:

11. Agitation
0 I am no more restless or wound up than usual.
1 I feel more restless or wound up than usual.
2 I am so restless or agitated that it’s hard to stay still.
3 I am so restless or agitated that I have to keep moving or doing
something.

What options does a Filipino psychologist have when using this


specific item in trying to assess depression in a client or respondent?
The psychologist can use the item as it was originally developed and
hope that the client understands the item. This option should be fine
if the respondent is adequately proficient in English. However, a
client who is not proficient in English may struggle with words like
“restless,” “wound up,” and even “agitated.”
Translation would be the next option for the Filipino psychologist,
and other scholars have reported the translation work that has been
done in the Philippines on various psychological tests. But going
back to the BDI item on agitation presented earlier, the translator
would most likely have a difficult time translating the very same
words, “restless,” “wound up,” and “agitated.” The closest Filipino
translation of “restless” that comes to mind are low frequency words
such as “balisa,” “hindi mapakali” and “hindi mapalagay.” However,
“balisa” is a low-frequency Tagalog word that may not be understood
by most Filipinos who do not have a deep knowledge of Tagalog.
The other two translations are higher-frequency terms, but may
be understood to have a more “physical” element (i.e., similar to
“malikot”), and thus, may not capture the full affective sense of
“restless.” In the main section of this paper, the various issues related
to test translation will be discussed, as this seems to be the most viable
option for Filipino psychologists who want to take advantage of the
availability of foreign-developed tests with established reliability and
validity.
However, there is still a third option for the Filipino psychologist,
and that is not to use these foreign-made tests, and instead develop
and validate new psychological tests for local use. Many Filipino
psychologists have actually advocated this option as early as the
1970s. Enriquez (1992) criticized foreign-made tests, particularly
those in the English language as being invalid for use among Filipinos,

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


A. B. I. BERNARDO 25

and advocated the development of indigenous tests. Over the


years, many such indigenous psychological tests of personality and
intelligence, among others, have been developed (see Cheung, 2004;
Church, 1987; Guanzon-Lapeña, Church, Carlota, & Katigbak, 1998).
But interestingly, most practicing psychologists in the Philippines
still prefer to use the foreign-made tests. This issue is another topic
of discussion and is not addressed in this paper. Instead, the paper
focuses on issues related to the first two options (i.e., use of original
English tests, and use of translations of foreign made tests in English),
as these seem to be the more common practice of Filipino psychologists
who do testing today.

Issues Related to Translating English-Language


Tests into Philippine Languages

Historically, translation of psychological tests into different


languages aimed to achieve a close linguistic translation, and these
involved various forward and backward translation techniques (van
de Vijver & Leung, 1997; Werner & Cambell, 1970). But not all items
in a psychological test are translatable (i.e., the linguistic translation
closely captures the psychological meaning of the item). Indeed,
there are test items that are poorly translatable; that is, although the
meaning is translatable, some conciseness is lost or some nuance
in the meaning is lost (see the earlier example about using “balisa”
to translate “restless”). In some cases, the item may actually be
untranslatable, and these occur when there is absolutely no overlap
between the linguistic and psychological features of the item in
translation (consider for example, how the personality description
of “happy-go-lucky” can be translated into Filipino). Thus, many
practitioners and testing experts soon realized that a close linguistic
translation could also involve many problems. Now test translators
emphasize adaptation and localization in translation instead of close
translations (Hambleton, 1994; Van de Vijver & Tanzer, 2004).
Adaptation involves literal translations of those parts of the items
that are translatable and modifying other parts of the items (and even
creating new items) based on the assumption that a close translation
might lead to having a biased or non-valid psychological test. Instead
of focusing on the linguistic translation, there is more consideration
given to ensuring that the target psychological construct is
adequately measured in the various languages. The State-Trait Anger

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


26 LOST IN TRANSLATION
Expression Inventory (Spielberger, 1988) is one good example of a
psychological test that has been translated into almost 50 languages,
where the translations do not contain close linguistic translations of
all the original English items. But in each language translation the
psychological constructs of state and trait anxiety were assessed in a
valid manner.
The work on test adaptation and translation has been quite
extensive that important testing organizations have already drafted
clear guidelines for doing so (see Hambleton, 2001). This paper shall
not endeavor to repeat what has been said in these guidelines; instead,
it shall emphasize some key concepts and elucidate on these concepts
in relation to the experience of psychologists in the Philippines.
We have already noted that close linguistic translations may
sometimes cause psychological tests or test items to become less
valid measures of the intended psychological construct, and that
the goal of translation is also to achieve psychological equivalence
in the translations. But what does psychological equivalence mean?
There are actually several levels of psychological equivalence that
need to be considered, particularly as psychological test items are
intended to be a quantitative measure of a psychological construct.
The psychological testing literature (see e.g., Poortinga, 1989; Van
de Vijver & Leung, 1997; Van de Vijver & Tanzer, 2004) refers to
different hierarchically linked types of equivalence. In the broadest
sense, equivalence between translations refers to a) similarity in the
psychological meaning of the test, which is more of a qualitative
equivalence, and b) similarity in the meaning of the scores of the tests
and the items, which is more quantitative.
More extensive discussion of the types of equivalence can be
obtained from other sources (Van de Vijver & Leung, 1997; Van de
Vijver & Tanzer, 2004), but we should underscore some important
distinctions about these types especially as they relate to how
psychological tests and their translations are applied. The first type of
equivalence is often called construct equivalence (but also functional
or structural equivalence). When two translations of the test are
equivalent, the same psychological construct is measured in the
two language versions. Construct equivalence presupposes that the
psychological construct is universally meaningful, or that the concept
is understood in the same way in different cultures and languages (Van
de Vijver & Tanzer, 2004). In other words, a psychological test that is
supposed to measure fluid intelligence is supposed to measure fluid
intelligence in the Philippines or in Italy, whether the test is in Filipino

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


A. B. I. BERNARDO 27
or Italian. If the test measures fluid intelligence in the Philippines, but
actually measured scholastic ability in Italy, then there is no construct
equivalence. Moreover, in multidimensional constructs, construct
equivalence also assumes that the construct measures the same
dimensions and the same relationships among these dimensions in
the different target populations. For example, if the psychological test
is supposed to measure five interrelated personality dimensions, it
should measure these five interrelated dimensions in the Philippines
and in Argentina, whether the language of the test is Filipino or
Spanish. If the test measures five personality dimensions in the
Philippines, but only four dimensions in Argentina, then there is no
construct equivalence.
The quantitative equivalence of psychological tests relates to
the scores and their interpretation, and there are two levels of this:
measurement unit equivalence and scalar (or full scale) equivalence
(Van de Vijver & Tanzer, 2004). With measurement unit equivalence,
two translations of the test are assumed to reflect differences in the
target construct in their respective target populations to the same
degree. In other words, the two tests have the same measurement
unit; for example a two-point difference in scores means the same
thing within each test. However, measurement unit equivalence
does not guarantee that scores from the two tests are comparable to
each other, as there might be a constant offset compared to another
measure, which is the case when there are different norms for each
version of the test. As such, the scores from the two scales may not
be comparable to each other, even if scores within each scale can be
compared to each other in the same way for both scales. When there
is no constant offset, or when the scores in the two versions have the
same quantitative origin or intercept, the two tests are said to have
full scalar equivalence. In such cases, the interpretation of scores is
exactly the same in both versions and is comparable across the scores.
To summarize, when Filipino psychologists translate English-
language psychological tests into any Philippine language, they should
be concerned about the qualitative and quantitative equivalence of
these with the original English versions. Otherwise, there might be no
basis for interpreting the tests in the manner suggested in the original
test manuals. Unfortunately, it is not safe to assume that a good
linguistic translation would have these properties and thus make the
translation equivalent to the original. Indeed, there are many factors
that create non-equivalence between translations of psychological
tests, and these are called different types of bias. These different types

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of bias are discussed in the next section.

Bias in Translations of Psychological Tests

In the psychological testing literature, the opposite or lack of


equivalence is defined as bias. Different types of bias create different
degrees of non-equivalence between the translation and the original.
There are parallels between the types of bias and the levels of
equivalence, but the parallels are not absolute. In this discussion, the
three types of bias identified by Van de Vijver and Poortinga (1997,
see also Van de Vijver & Leung, 1997) are referred to as: a) construct
bias, b) method bias, and c) item bias.
Construct bias. Construct bias is observed when the psychological
tests measure different psychological constructs in two different
cultural or linguistic groups, or when the psychological constructs
measured are merely partially overlapping. Construct bias may also
occur when different behaviors and consequences are associated
with the psychological construct in different cultural or linguistic
groups. Earlier we suggested that some tests that are supposed to
measure intelligence may actually be measuring scholastic ability in
other cultures, and this is possible in a host of other psychological
constructs. Even seemingly simple psychological constructs can be
given different meanings in different cultures.
Even a simple affective concept like “happiness” can actually be
difficult to measure across cultures. The Happy Planet Index aimed
to measure levels of happiness of people in different countries, and it
found the people in Costa Rica to be the happiest people in the world;
Filipinos were ranked 14th (www.happyplanetindex.org). But does
“happy” mean the same thing across all cultures? Comparing North
Americans with East Asian, Uchida, Norasakkunkit and Kitayama
(2004) found different associations with the concept of happiness.
In particular, in North American contexts, happiness tended to be
associated with personal or individual achievement, positive affect,
and self-esteem. In contrast, in East Asian contexts, happiness tended
to be associated with interpersonal connectedness, attaining balance
between positive and negative affect, and a perceived embeddedness
of the self within one’s social relationships. Even what is considered
positive affect may also be different in these two cultural contexts.
Tsai, Knutson, and Fung (2006) found that North Americans and East
Asians seem to have different notions of what the ideal affective or

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A. B. I. BERNARDO 29
emotional state involves. While North Americans aspire more often
to a high-energy elation, thrill, and excitement (or high arousal
positive affect), East Asians aspire more often to a tranquil joy and
calm (or low arousal positive affect). These differences also have
distinct psychological correlates and consequences in both cultures
(Tsai, 2007).
Given these cultural variations, we can see how specific
psychological tests that are intended to measure affective states may
have some problems related to construct bias. Consider another
item in the Beck Depression Inventory (1995) that refers to “loss of
pleasure”:

4. Loss of Pleasure
0 I get as much pleasure as I ever did from the things I enjoy.
1 I don’t enjoy things as much as I used to.
2 I get very little pleasure from the things I used to enjoy.
3 I can’t get any pleasure from the things I used to enjoy.

Will the concepts of pleasure and enjoyment refer to the same


thing in all cultures where this item is translated? Would the loss
of pleasure be indicative of depression to the same extent across all
cultures?
In the Philippine context, our research group has encountered
similar instances of possible construct bias of some psychological
constructs. One example involves the psychological construct
“academic emotions,” which is an important construct in the field
of educational psychology, and for which there are readily available
and validated psychological tests (Pekrun, 2006). In a study that
explored the construct of academic emotions, Bernardo, Ouano,
and Salanga (2009) observed that the term “emotions” could be
translated as “nararamdaman” or “damdamin” in Filipino. The word
“nararamdaman” does not refer exclusively to affective states,
and may actually include even physical states. It is not surprising,
therefore, that the study found Filipino students reporting “pagod”
or “kapuy” (tired) or “antok” (sleepy) when asked about the emotions
they experienced in the classroom. This is a case when the translation
only partially overlaps with the intended psychological construct of
academic emotion. The domain of emotions is likely to be an area
where linguistic terms only partially overlap with the psychological
construct when studied across cultural or linguistic groups (e.g.,
think of how “contempt” can be translated in the different Philippine
languages).

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But construct bias can also be found when assessing non-affective
psychological constructs. One compelling example was actually found
when Watkins and Gerong (1999) wanted to study the self-concept of
Cebuano students. In their study, they used both the English and the
Cebuano translation of a standard self-concept scale. They found that
the students who answered the test in Cebuano responded to the self-
concept scale using aspects of the self that related to their family and
community roles and relationships. On the other hand, the students
who answered the test in English responded to the self-concept scale
by referring to aspects of the self that related to their being a student.
Thus, two different components of the self-concept were being evoked
by two language versions of one scale in one bilingual population.
This is an interesting case where the methodological aspect of the
psychological test (i.e., the language) seems to be associated with
construct nonequivalence.
But before method bias is discussed in greater detail, we should
underscore the importance of considering construct equivalence and
bias in the translation, adaptation, and even use of psychological
tests. Filipino psychologists should be mindful of the possibility
that some of the psychological constructs that are measured in
standardized psychological tests actually do not mean the same thing
in the Philippine context. Moreover, given the heterogeneity in the
cultural environments within the Philippines (i.e., large variations in
level of urbanization, industrialization, availability of communication
technology), it is possible that what we assume to be standard
psychological principles relating to constructs may actually have
functionally different meanings for different Filipinos.
Method Bias. The second type of bias relates to different aspects
of the psychological testing process, and has three different sources:
[a] sample bias, [b] instrument bias, and [c] administration bias.
When Filipino psychologists use psychological tests, they have to be
mindful that there are vast differences in educational level, language
proficiency, and cultural experiences among Filipinos coming from
different sectors of society. Thus it is possible that how a score of a
respondent differs from the norm reflects differences in experiences
relative to the norm group, and not actual psychological differences.
In such cases, we have a form of item bias. When test norms and
interpretation of scores are derived from a homogenous population, it
is difficult to rule out sample bias, especially in a very diverse country
like the Philippines.
Related to sample bias is instrument bias, which refers to

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A. B. I. BERNARDO 31
characteristics of the instrument, such as the nature of the response
options, demand characteristics of the tests, and other factors that
relate to response biases in different cultural groups. For example,
an American study found that Hispanic respondents tended to
use the extreme values of the five-point scale more than Caucasian
respondents (Marin, Gamba, & Marin, 1992). Interestingly,
bilingual Hispanics showed the bias to use extreme values when
the questionnaires were in Spanish, but not when these were in
English (Hui & Triandis, 1989). Closer to home, Smith (2004) found
that the respondents from the Philippines are among the highest in
showing an acquiescent bias, or the bias for more extreme responses
at the positive end of the response scales (but see Grimm & Church,
1999). Watkins and Cheung (1995) studied various types of response
biases (e.g., positivity and negativity bias, low standard deviation,
inconsistency of related items, and consistency of unrelated items)
in various cultures including the Philippines and suggested that
these response biases may reflect differences in academic ability,
and perhaps, intellectual ability, among other variables. But at this
point, we do not know whether there are differences in levels of these
various response biases for different subgroups in the Philippines.
Other than response bias, there are other forms of instrument
bias. For example, the language of the psychological test may also
be a source of bias, when Filipino translations are given to Cebuano,
Ilocano, or Waray speakers. Using standardized computerized testing
procedures may create bias for individuals who are not accustomed
to using the computer.
The last form of instrument bias relates to the administration of
the test, starting with how instructions are communicated by the test
administrator to the respondent. There may be differences in how
instructions are understood if there are language differences between
the administrator and respondent (Gass & Varone, 1991). Even very
subtle factors like if the test administrator is perceived to be violating
cultural norms of communication in the test administration process
(Goodwin & Lee, 1994) can be biases in the testing process. In the
Philippine context, attempts to help the respondent who may not
be familiar with psychological testing or with the English language
can also create method bias. Test administrators in some Philippine
testing centers have shared how they sometimes provide additional
explanations or elaborations on the items if it seems that the
respondent does not understand the question. These procedures are
ad hoc and are not standardized for all respondents, creating so much

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room for method bias.


Item Bias. Even if we assume that problems related to construct
and method bias are addressed, there is still the more subtle form of
bias, which is the bias at the level of the item. This type of bias has also
been called differential item functioning (DIF) in the psychological
testing literature (Holland & Wainer, 1993). An informal definition
of DIF would be that there are specific problems at the item level
that make the item incomparable across translations or test versions.
Operationally DIF is observed when two persons coming from two
cultures and answering two versions of the same psychological test
with the same level of the psychological construct do not score in the
item in the same way. For example, imagine a group of Filipino adults
and a group of Dutch adults all attain exactly the same score in a
psychological test measuring anxiety (but in the Filipino and Dutch
languages, respectively), so they can all be presumed to have the
same levels of anxiety. But for one specific item of the psychological
test of anxiety, the Filipinos score the item significantly higher than
their Dutch counterparts. This would be a case of DIF.
Why would specific items function differently in different
versions or across cultures? There are many different sources of
DIF, the most basic of which may be a poor translation of the item,
which may have led to an ambiguous or even incorrect statement of
the item in one version of the test. But there could also be cultural
specifics related to the connotative meaning or cultural significance of
certain words, items, or concepts. Extending the Filipino and Dutch
examples, consider a hypothetical item from a hypothetical Dutch test
of crystallized intelligence borrowed from Van de Vijver (personal
communication): “Hoe heet de koningin van Nederland?” The literal
translation of the item in English is: “What is the name of the queen
of the Netherlands?” and in Filipino it is: “Ano ang pangalan ng reyna
ng Netherlands?” The first problem with the translation of the item
is that although knowing the name of the queen of the Netherlands
may represent crystallized intelligence for Dutch children, it does not
do so for Filipino children, and hence the latter would find this item
much more difficult than their Dutch counterparts. The item may be
modified and adapted in the Philippine context to “What is the name
of the president of the Philippines?” Now both items refer to the head
of state of the respective countries. However, there are still cultural
differences in how salient the head of state is in the lives of children
in these countries. In the Netherlands, the queen is head of state for
life, and her name and image are everywhere including the coins,

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A. B. I. BERNARDO 33
stamps, most buildings including schools, among others, and is thus,
quite a common sight for most children in The Netherlands. In the
Philippines, the president changes every few years, and names and
images of present and past presidents can be found in various places
in different parts of the country. Thus, knowledge about the name
of the president of the Philippines may not be as well established in
the knowledge schemes of Filipino children, compared to their Dutch
counterparts. This can be a possible source of DIF: given that a group
of Dutch children and a group of Filipino children have the same
level of crystallized intelligence, the Dutch children might get this
item correctly more often than the group of Filipino children.
Another important source of item bias or DIF could be the
appropriateness of item content. Still following through with the
Dutch and Filipino comparison, consider the following item in the
Beck Depression Inventory (1995) which refers to loss of interest in
sex:

4. Loss of Interest in Sex


0 I have not noticed any recent change in my interest in sex.
1 I am less interested in sex than I used to be.
2 I am much less interested in sex now.
3 I have lost interest in sex completely.

A group of Filipino and Dutch adults with the same level of


depression might respond to this item differently because the
Filipinos might find disclosing their true responses to the item as
inappropriate, whereas their Dutch counterparts may not.
Thus far, the paper has pointed to the possible sources of bias that
results in the possible nonequivalent translations of English-language
psychological tests into Filipino and other Philippine languages. For
practical purposes, it should be underscored that there are profound
implications of this bias depending on how the test is used. For
diagnostic purposes, there can be internal bias in terms of how an
individual respondent’s personality, intellectual ability, or some
other individual difference variable is interpreted. Problems with any
of the various forms of bias can result in incorrect assessment of an
individual person in any of the possible psychological variables, thus
making the assessment invalid. There can also be external bias, when
scores from biased tests are used to make decisions—for example to
make decisions as to whether an applicant for a school will be admitted,
whether a scholarship will be given to one student and not another,
whether to hire a job applicant or not, whether a juvenile offender is

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able to discern what is right from wrong, or whether a spouse will be


judged as being psychologically incapable of sustaining a marriage.
For Filipino psychologists, the implications of such biases in the use
of psychological tests are far-reaching. But what has been done so far
to understand and address these issues?

Understanding and Addressing Equivalence and


Bias in Psychological Tests in the Philippines

In reviewing what has been done in the Philippines related to


equivalence and bias, we can refer to the published studies on these
two topics. Unfortunately, there are very few published research
studies to be found that address these issues of equivalence and bias.
Although there are numerous research studies that involve validating
psychological tests, and the number of these has increased markedly
in recent years (see e.g., Magno, 2011; Olvida, 2010; Villavicencio,
2010), studies that explicitly address the issue of equivalence are few.
Construct equivalence research in the Philippines. Among the
various issues and concerns raised in earlier sections of the article,
the area where there has been much work is the topic of construct
equivalence (structural or functional equivalence). One of the earlier
studies on this concern involves a very popular personality test,
the Revised NEO Personality Inventory (Costa & McCrae, 1992).
In a cross-cultural study that included a Filipino sample, McCrae,
Costa, Del Pilar, Rolland, and Parker (1998) confirmed the five-
factor personality structure of the test, thus providing evidence for
the construct equivalence of the Filipino translation of the test in the
Philippines and the other test versions. Another example involves
comparisons of the Sense-of-Self Scales developed by McInerney,
Yeung, and McInerney (2001) to measure various self-concept related
constructs among students. Ganotice and Bernardo (2010) analyzed
English and Filipino versions of the scale and found structural
equivalence between the two versions.
These translation studies do not always find construct
equivalence. When Bernardo, Posecion, Reganit, and Rodriguez-
Rivera (2005) studied the translation of the Social Axioms Survey
(Leung et al., 2002), they found support for the five-factor structure,
but only after removing numerous items from the original scale.
The Epistemological Beliefs Questionnaire (Schommer, 1998) was
also translated into Filipino by Bernardo (2008), and the results of

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A. B. I. BERNARDO 35
the study found construct non-equivalence. Whereas the original
questionnaire was intended to measure four interrelated constructs,
the translated and English language versions only suggested two
interrelated constructs.
Other researchers have explored the construct validity of English
language tests with Filipino samples, without translating the
tests. Some of these studies validated the original structure of the
constructs intended by the original scales. For example, Ganotice
and Bernardo (2010) validated the structure of constructs of three
scales: Facilitating Conditions Questionnaire (McInerney, Dowson, &
Yeung, 2005), Sense of Self Scale, and Inventory of Student Motivation
(both by McInerney et al., 2002). All the scales were in the original
English language but administered to Filipino respondents, and the
respective constructs of the scales were all confirmed in the study.
King, Ganotice, and Watkins (2011) also validated the hypothesized
four-factor structure of Inventory of Student Motivation with Filipino
students and showed that this structure was invariant with a cross-
cultural sample from Hong Kong. King (2010) also studied a short
version of the Academic Emotions Questionnaire (Pekrun, 2006) in
English with a sample of Filipino students and likewise confirmed the
intended constructs of the scales. Finally, King and Watkins (2011a &
b) also confirmed the intended four-factor structure of the constructs
within the Goal Orientations and Learning Strategies Survey (Dowson
& McInerney, 2004) with various samples of Filipino students.
But similar investigations do not always confirm the structure of
the original scales. De La Rosa (2010) administered the original English
version of the achievement goals questionnaire of Elliot and McGregor
(2001), which had a 2 x 2 factor structure. Instead of four interrelated
constructs, he found only three factors when the psychological
instrument was used with his Filipino sample. Bernardo (2001b,
Bernardo, Zhang, & Callueng, 2002) also found that with a Filipino
sample, the higher order constructs of the Thinking Styles Inventory
(Sternberg, 1997) was not equivalent to the higher order constructs
found with the original English test, but was more similar to the higher
order constructs found in the Hong Kong Chinese version (Zhang &
Sternberg, 1998). Zhang and Bernardo (2000) likewise found that
the structure of the constructs of the Learning Process Questionnaire
(Biggs, 1987) seemed to be valid with students of higher scholastic
ability but not for those with low scholastic ability.
Taken together, all these studies suggest that we cannot safely
assume that the English language tests are measuring the intended

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36 LOST IN TRANSLATION
constructs when used with Filipino samples, and that we can also not
assume the same with Filipino translations of the scales.
This brief review of studies may suggest that there has been quite
a significant amount of work done related to studying the construct
equivalence of English-language tests and their translations in
the Philippine setting. But if one considers the very wide range of
psychological tests used in various settings like schools, companies,
hospitals, psychological clinics, and testing centers, the proportion of
tests that have been studied in this way probably comprises a very
small percentage of the total number of tests currently in circulation.
Measurement unit and full scalar equivalence research in the
Philippines. If we consider studies that inquire into the measurement
unit and scalar equivalence of scales, there are even fewer to refer
to. Perhaps, this is because the research and statistical techniques for
doing so are more complex. Indeed, to study construct equivalence or
structural equivalence, a researcher only needs to establish exploratory
and confirmatory factor analytic procedures, and some other basic
multivariate techniques. However, more complicated procedures such
as multigroup confirmatory factor analytic techniques and procedures
for measuring differential item functioning are required to study the
quantitative equivalence between versions of a psychological test. It
should be noted that in the educational measurement field, there has
been more research work done on this topic (see e.g., Pedrajita, 2009;
Pedrajita & Talisayon, 2009).
The few studies that attempt to inquire into psychometric
equivalence between English language tests and their Filipino
translations actually do not find full scalar equivalence. For example,
as part of their theoretical investigation, Bernardo and Ismail
(2010) looked into the equivalence of the mastery and performance
achievement goals scales in English with Filipino and Malaysian
students. They found only partial invariance of the scales and not full
scalar invariance or equivalence. Similarly, Ganotice, Bernardo, and
King (in press) looked into the equivalence of English and Filipino
versions of the Inventory of Student Motivation (McInerney, et al.,
2002) and also found only partial equivalence. Note, however, that the
absence of full-scalar equivalence and measurement-unit invariance
is only a problem when comparing scores across cultures. If tests
are being used only within one culture, it is sufficient to construct
equivalence, and perhaps some degree of measurement unit
equivalence, especially if the scores are being interpreted within the
culture, with reference to norms within the culture, and in relation to

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A. B. I. BERNARDO 37
variables also measured within the same culture.
Practical approaches to reducing bias. Other than doing research
establishing the equivalence (or nonequivalence) of psychological
tests, there are actually some very practical things that could be
done to reduce bias. For example, when it comes to method bias,
the standardization of test administration and scoring procedures
is important to keep in mind. Thus, more effort should be taken to
ensure that test administrators and scorers are sufficiently trained
and are guided by very detailed manuals and/or protocols for
test administration, scoring, and interpretation. Instructions for
such tests should be as detailed as possible, anticipating possible
misinterpretations by the respondents.
When it comes to translations, several experts in psychological
testing have already provided (see e.g., Hambleton & De Jong, 2003;
Van de Vijver & Hambleton, 1996) practical guides for managing the
translation processes. These experts now propose what is called an
integral management approach in translation. Test translators should
not only aim to reproduce the items and instructions of one test in
another language but also make judgments about whether the test is
suitable and appropriate to the target culture in which the translation
will be used. As it is impossible to be completely certain about issues
of suitability based merely on theoretical assumptions, test translation
experts now suggest that translators do pilot studies on early
versions of the translation and closely document and validate these
translations. Harkness (2003) suggests that the translation procedures
follow several stages: a) the translation stage, which may involve
translation and back translation procedures, the committee approach,
or a combination of these approaches, b) qualitative pre-testing of the
translations using feedback from monolingual and bilingual judges
in focused group discussions or think-aloud interviews, c) reviewing
the revisions based on qualitative pre-testing feedback, d) quantitative
pre-testing with actual administration and tests of equivalence and
bias, and e) final adjudication or decision on a final version of the test.
More careful and deliberate steps in translation processes could help
prevent biases at different levels.

The Steps Ahead for Filipino Psychologists Using


Foreign English-Language Tests

After discussing what has been done and what can be done to ensure

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38 LOST IN TRANSLATION

that foreign made English-language psychological tests are valid for


use with Filipino samples (that is, that the tests used with Filipinos
are equivalent to those developed in other countries for their intended
samples), we come to the question of how do we ensure that these
tests are used appropriately by Filipino psychologists? Of course, this
question cannot be answered with a simple step that will be a panacea
to this rather huge concern. But there are a number of points that need
to be emphasized in order for there to be a consensus and collective
action on this issue. I list ten propositions, which vary in terms of
complexity and feasibility.
Proposition 1. We should stop assuming that these tests are valid
for all Filipino respondents. Indeed, we should not take the word of
the test distributors that the tests are universally valid. Instead, we
should inquire into whether the tests have been validated and tested
for construct and measurement equivalence with a Filipino sample. In
cases when the tests have not been validated, the psychologist using
the tests should bear in mind the possible limitations associated with
interpreting the scores of a test that has not been validated with the
target population and seek additional convergent information using a
combination of other validated tests and/or relevant assessment tools
(e.g., clinical interview, etc.).
Proposition 2. Teachers of psychological testing and assessment
courses should give emphasis to the topics related to bias and
equivalence in using psychological tests in different cultures and
linguistic groups. Of course this would require that they update
themselves on such topics, and teachers should be provided support
and resources for doing so.
Proposition 3. Researchers should do more systematic and
sustained investigations on construct bias, method bias (e.g., on
response biases among different Filipino samples, etc.), item bias
(e.g., differential item functioning). There should be more research
on establishing construct equivalence or structural validity of
foreign made tests with Filipino respondents, whether these tests
are translated or not. If possible, there should also be research
investigating measurement unit and full scalar invariance, which
would allow comparability with norms in other countries or cultures.
Proposition 4. Researchers should prioritize investigations
on widely used personality and intelligence tests used by human
resource recruiters & personnel, schools and admissions officers,
the legal system (annulment cases, juvenile justice system), medical
practitioners, and so on. Indeed, much of the research done so far

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A. B. I. BERNARDO 39
involve psychological tests used for research. These types of research
should be directed at the tests that are actually more widely used by
practitioners.
Proposition 5. Researchers should work on more translations for
different Philippine ethnolinguistic groups and do research on the
bias and equivalence of the translations. Filipino is just one of the
many languages spoken in the Philippines. It may not be practical
to do translations in all the Philippine languages, but it may be
necessary to develop and study translations in the major languages
such as Cebuano, Ilonggo, Ilocano, Bicol, Waray, and others.
Proposition 6. Researchers should publish and disseminate
their results and also ensure that their findings and test translations/
adaptations are made available to various users and practitioners. It
is not necessary to make these translations available for free; instead,
researchers and translators should find ways to provide practitioners
and other researchers access to these materials, even for a fee.
Proposition 7. Practitioners, particularly those working with
rural and/or less-educated clients, should deliberately seek for test
translations and adaptations for their own practice. They should
not rely on what is easily available, unless they are certain of their
validity. Indeed, applying foreign made tests in an uncritical manner
could be the foundation upon which many invalid diagnoses and
recommendations are made.
Proposition 8. Practitioners should systematically observe and
document their observations and experiences involving English
language versions of the test with less educated populations. The
experiences of these practitioners are actually rich resources upon
which further improvements can be made on the psychological
tests being used; but these experiences need to be systematically
documented, shared, and analyzed in ways that aim to develop better
tests for use with particular clients.
Proposition 9. Practitioners should systematically observe and
document their observations and experiences involving translations
of the tests. For those who actually translate the tests or use
translations made by other people, the qualitative validation is also
as important. Again the need to systematically document, and share
these experiences should be emphasized.
Proposition 10. As there will always be non-translatable
constructs, Filipino psychologists should also invest more effort, or at
least provide support for developing indigenous psychological tests.
This support should extend to the validation, marketing, distribution,

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and application of the tests.


There are a lot of challenges facing Filipino psychologists who
use psychological tests in their profession. The actions required to
face these challenges need to involve the collective action of the
whole community of psychological researchers, practitioners, and
educators. Practitioners need researchers to develop translations that
are valid for use with different Filipino clients. Researchers need to
collaborate with practitioners for the qualitative and quantitative
validation of translations. Practitioners can provide researchers with
rich personal observations on how the tests are applied and how they
work. Researchers can guide practitioners on how to reflect on and
systematically document their experiences using the test. Educators
should create awareness and knowledge related to the issue of validity
of using foreign made tests with Filipino clients, especially since their
students will be the future psychology practitioners. Indeed, Filipino
psychologists need not lose their clients in bad translation if they
work together in ensuring that attention and effort is invested on
guaranteeing the validity of tests and their translations.

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The Literary Facebook:
Notes on the Possibilities of Literature in
Internet Social Networking

Ian Rosales Casocot


Silliman University
Dumaguete City, Philippines

Can social networking be a source of literature? This article posits


that there is a possibility of Facebook and Twitter becoming a
medium for literary expression. While many contemporary Filipino
writers consider time spent on social networking sites such as
Facebook and Twitter to be “a waste of time,” a growing number
of writers have begun looking at the possibilities of the "status
update" as a form of literature, akin to the haiku, that is very much
a form dictated by the Internet age.

Keywords: Facebook, Twitter, social network literature, flash


fiction

W
hile I was grappling for things to say in my presentation
on Facebook and what it means for literature in general
and writing in particular for Taboan 2010—The Second
Philippine International Writers Festival in Cebu City, Philippines,
the Palanca-winning playwright Glenn Sevilla Mas told me that I
was “the poster boy” of my generation: my life was an open book
on Facebook by choice, the paragon of the Socratic notion of “the
examined life” in the Internet Age. In confession, I am what you
would call a Facebook mainliner, a heavy user, an addict—something
that nevertheless has affected my literary existence in more positive
ways than anything else.
Almost every day, the first thing I do in the morning is to check my
Facebook account. On Facebook, I can do several things that makes
this online site quite unique for the way it conveniently puts together

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I.R. CASOCOT 47
in one basket the varieties of Internet existence: check my email, check
my calendar for upcoming events to attend, give birthday shout-outs
to friends, chat, blog, upload pictures to my online albums, check
the links to videos and Internet articles shared by friends, and get
acquainted with the relatively interesting minutiae in the lives of
linked friends via their notes, photos, and little missives on what
they’re doing which we call on Facebook as “status updates.” In the
course of a typical day, I would probably post around twenty of my
own status updates, which are mostly variations of little observations,
information about things we are currently doing, rants, witticisms,
and quotations from books or movies or songs. This does not include
the replies to subsequent comments done by Facebook friends.
So, yes, Glenn is right. I am the poster boy of my generation: I
live on Facebook, and Facebook, for the most part, is my life under
an Internet microscope. So much so that even my offline dramas
eventually find their way in, and are eventually magnified to the rest
of the world like an online equivalent of a teleserye. I once got famously
dumped in Facebook—and my Facebook friends got wind of it first
at the moment the “relationship status” of my partner of five years
changed from “In a Relationship” to “Single.” I remember that day
too well: I got a barrage of text messages from everywhere, even from
Spain, Australia, and the United States, asking me if I was okay. I was
walking down the road headed somewhere, and the messages at first
confounded me—until it dawned on me: something was happening
on my Facebook page, and so I caught a quick tricycle trip home to
find out that, yes, I was suddenly single.
This drama reminds me of a quip: nothing is ever official about
our lives these days, unless it is announced on Facebook. I once told
a friend that if somebody would just bother to put together all my
status updates, that would virtually constitute my autobiography.
I must be painting a horrid picture now of Facebook, especially
for those of you who are quite concerned about the intrusions to
individual privacy this website seems bent on warping or destroying.
Believe me, I too am concerned about that—and there are privacy
settings in Facebook that actually allow you to filter who views
specific status updates or incriminating pictures and what-not, away
from the prying or disapproving eyes of stalkers and ex-lovers and
bosses and HRD heads.
But I must admit there is now a significant shift occurring in
the way my generation views the blurring of the lines between the
private and the public. Somebody once called my generation as the

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48 THE LITERARY FACEBOOK
Confessional Generation, taught in the ways of public dramas by
Oprah Winfrey and Jerry Springer and Kris Aquino. These days, there
are things that we want to say where we never hesitate to share in a
public space like Facebook. A decade ago the very same idea would
probably have us recoiling from the sheer horror of oversharing—
oversharing information, even such simple, mundane, or useless
things such as, “Ian is eating eggs and bacon for breakfast.”
But the most fascinating thing you soon find is that, contrary to
expectations, most people actually respond to most of the “mundane
things” reported in status updates, even the eggs and bacon one had
for breakfast. Adam N. Noinson, in “Looking At, Looking Up or
Keeping Up with People?: Motives and Use of Facebook” (2008) in
the published proceedings of the 26th Annual SIGCHI Conference on
Human Factors in Computing Systems identified seven unique uses and
gratifications in people’s utility of status updates, which included
social connection, shared identities, content, social investigation,
social network surfing and status updating.
What is Facebook, and how has it exactly enthralled most of the
online world? Simply put, Facebook is a social networking Internet
site—and for the uninitiated, that simply means it allows you to have
a personal page crammed with information about you that you want
to share ostensibly with the world. This page is linked in intricate
ways to the personal pages of other people who happen to be your
friends or acquaintances of varying degrees. It is a virtual community
where things happen—conversation and connection foremost among
them.
Statistics show there are millions of people now engaged in
Facebook. Facebook released statistics for 2010 which tells us that
there are now more than 400 million active users of the social network
worldwide, more than 35 million of which update their status every
day, contributing to more than 60 million status updates total each
day. While the United States leads the pack with the most users, the
Philippines ranks eighth with 10,647,100 users as of last March. (The
only other countries in Asia in the list include Indonesia at third and
Turkey at fourth.) In Internet parlance, that’s a lot of captured eyeballs.
Imagine then the possible ways Facebook has had impact on the
various aspects of the writer’s life, as well as his or her readers.
I turned to several Filipino writers who happen to be active users
of Facebook and emailed them—through Facebook—two questions:
[1] How do you use Facebook as a writer? [2] What do you think
Facebook mean for readers?

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I.R. CASOCOT 49

Quite a few replied to my query. The poet Cesar Ruiz Aquino


immediately replied with the kind of literary teasing typical of his
writings: “Seeeeeeeeecret! It means E.T.-real reality. Look in Facebook
& you may see/ Someone who’s camera-ready-rie,” while the poet
Lawrewnce Ypil wrote: “I don’t really think Facebook has changed or
affected the way I write.”
The rest of the responses give the full spectrum of the writerly
examination of how social networking has, in one way or other,
affected the literary life of the Philippine writer.

CRISTINA PANTOJA HIDALGO, fictionist and essayist: I can only


speak for myself. How do I use Facebook as a writer? [1] I post Notes
which are really new short and not-so-short essays of mine, and which
really should go into a blog I thought I’d begin keeping, but have never
gotten around to; [2] I post announcements about new books (both
my own and those of other writers) or old books I’ve rediscovered;
or articles I find interesting; [3] I read other writers’ notes which are
usually essays too, or poems, even stories—mainly these are writers
who are my personal friends, or writers whose work I already know
and am interested in. What does Facebook mean for readers? I’m sure
the answer will depend on the reader’s age, profession/occupation,
cultural background, etc. For me it is a quick, easy way to access
interesting material (both international and national) that would take
too long to find and which I don’t have the time or energy to look
for myself; and a fun way to keep in touch with other writers—both
friends and strangers—and find out what they’re doing. I imagine
that one source of satisfaction for many readers is the opportunity
Facebook affords for instant response, interaction, etc.

STAN GERONIMO, fictionist: “I don’t expect Facebook to improve


my writing. But it does have a supplementary function. It wires you
to a whole network of writers in the literary scene. It has never been
easier to converse with authors you’ve only seen in anthologies before.
This doesn’t directly aid our craft, but writing is not just about skill, it
is also about contacts and having a wide network of editors, mentors,
resource speakers, publishers, and professors who contribute to our
work.”

YVETTE TAN, fictionist: “I mainly use Facebook to stay in touch with


friends but I find that it’s useful for work as well, since I’ve scheduled
interviews and also have been contacted for them via Facebook.

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50 THE LITERARY FACEBOOK

Depending on how a writer uses it, Facebook can give readers a


different insight on the writer—this time as a real person instead of a
blank entity that wrote the words on a book’s page.”

ADAM DAVID, fictionist and graphic artist: “I don’t really use Fezboobs
as a writer like how [poet] Angelo Suarez—theoretical ponderings
and maybe conversation—and [fictionists] Iwa Wilwayco/U Eliserio—
networking drive to reap enough peeps for financial mileage to
get books printed—use it. It DEFINITELY has a use, mainly as a
networking tool, but it requires a certain blurring of the writing with
the selling-of-the-writing that I’m not quite ready for just yet. I’m
actually still very allergic to that notion as it fosters that particular
malignant malaise we call ‘the Cult of Personality.’ Fezboobs has more
meaning for me as a reader, mos def, especially with the various Fan
Pages available for subscription, not to mention the actual writers/
artists that you can maybe connect to as a Friend. The things I get out
of these networking efforts are the regular updates that are pertinent
to their production, and also the fact that I get to indulge on my own
weakness for celebrity culture and our addiction to the blurring of
their public and private personas with my own seemingly little less-
than-important life narrative.”

FELISA H. BATACAN, fictionist: “If I really think about it, it’s useful for
someone based overseas like myself to keep track of what’s happening
in the Philippine literary scene. For example, when someone launches
a new book or project, or when there’s a call for submissions, etc. It’s
always nice to see what people are doing, especially those you know
or admire. And it’s also great when you realize someone shares your
interests—for example I just reconnected with an old schoolmate who
also makes jewelry. We’ve been discussing techniques via e-mail and
that has been a learning experience for both of us. Some might suggest
it helps to build community among writers, although I suppose I’m
not around the site enough to get a solid sense of that. As both a
writer and a reader, it’s also useful from time to time to see what other
people are reading, watching, listening to—or eating! I’ve gotten the
occasional great book, film, music or restaurant tip this way. Usually
they’re things I wouldn’t normally choose to check out on my own.
But because I respect a certain friend’s judgment, I’ll do so and find
something new (to me, anyway) and it turns out to be fantastic.”

SUSAN LARA, fictionist: “I go to Facebook the way I’d go to a coffee

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I.R. CASOCOT 51
shop where I’m likely to meet friends, particularly friends who write
and love to read. I’d like to know what they’re working on now, what
they’re reading, what they think of a new book or movie, or simply
how they’re doing. It’s an easy way to keep in touch and catch up
with friends. I love reading poems posted by friends, offering my two
cents worth on them, and sharing essays, poems, links to reviews,
etc.”

ROLANDO TOLENTINO, fictionist: “I use it as a repository of


columns, additional readership, and a virtual formation of community
of readers and authors. By the very characteristics of Facebook, it is
a social networking site—to read up on authors and friends, their
personal statements, etc. which they might not have the chance to do
with traditional media, or even just the limits of physical time and
space.”

CARLJOE JAVIER, fictionist: “As a writer, I have been corresponding


with other writers and editors, building a base, and really seeing
what other people are thinking based on the kind of material that
they post on Facebook. There are a lot of brilliant ideas that can be
found in Facebook Notes, and ideas that can inspire one to write.
What does Facebook mean for readers? There are a lot of things, like
finding things online, via being fans or other things, that they would
not have been able to find via traditional marketing and the shelves of
bricks and mortars stories. Further, based on personal experience, it’s
a great way for readers to connect with writers. It has happened on
several occasions that people who have read my book have looked me
up on Facebook and added me as a friend. They get to interact with
writers, ask questions, keep updated (like in Twitter) with the writer’s
projects. There are a lot of fun dynamics to be observed in Facebook.
I think that readers get the better of it because writers, seeing the lack
of marketing on the part of a lot of publishers, turn to the net and
utilize things like Facebook fan pages and the like.”

GIBBS CADIZ, critic: “I use Facebook mainly as an extension platform


for my blog/writing. It widens readership, contributes to online traffic
and jumpstarts discussions/feedback that are often distinct from what
the posts normally generate in my blog (no anonymous comments on
Facebook, after all—so the tone/flavor are different, at the very least).
Other than that, I’m not much of a Facebook user. I’m unable even to
update my shout-outs for days/weeks on end.”

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52 THE LITERARY FACEBOOK

VISCONDE CARLO VERGARA, graphic novelist: “Honestly,


I haven’t paid much attention to the possibilities of Facebook as a
creator because, honestly, I’ve not been very comfortable with hard-
sell, which is what I imagine other creators engage in. It’s only recently,
when I created fan pages for Zaturnnah and Queen Femina, that I’ve
been able to provide a venue where I can communicate to my readers,
albeit assuming the personas of these characters. If you check the fan
pages of these two characters, the fans are more active in making
casual comments, a kind of interaction I rarely get in my own profile
page. So, in that sense, I’ve been using Facebook as a stethoscope.
What is the collective pulse of my readers? From time to time, though,
I do promote a few things through my status updates. I rarely use
the Notes feature, which could have been a great alternative to my
personal blog. But I still prefer my blog when posting lengthy pieces.”

MERLIE ALUNAN, poet: “I’ve not thought too much about Facebook
and writers. I imagine it’s the same way other folks, say salesmen,
use it, a way to get in touch, a way to bother each other, or help, or,
as you and I have been doing, hollering for help. I’ve had requests for
workshops in Facebook and someone has asked me if I’d be willing
to take a look at his works. Nothing heavy, though. I’ve not played
any of those games, and I don’t think I ever will. The way Facebook
allows you to search for ‘friends,’ I imagine any reader would be able
to get in touch with a writer, making them less of a mystery, more
accessible.”

GERRY ALANGUILAN, graphic novelist: “Although I joined Facebook


primarily to get in touch with old friends and classmates, I’ve come
to use it to network with fellow comics professionals for industry
news, jobs, trends and so forth. I also use it as a way to talk about and
promote my work. People who appreciate the work I do find me in
Facebook and get in touch with me there, and I manage to convert old
friends and classmates into readers of my work. As a fan myself, I’ve
managed to get one on one conversations with people whose work I
like. Facebook really allows this kind of interaction now, which hasn’t
been really possible before.”

LUIS KATIGBAK, fictionist: “As an editor, I often use Facebook to


contact writers, pitch ideas back and forth, and assign stories. As a
writer, I sometimes use it to contact sources and get information and

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I.R. CASOCOT 53
quotes for a story... Also: connecting in general with other writers
(reading and responding to their Notes and updates), and checking
schedules of writing-related events. Readers can keep track of the
activities of favorite living authors (in my case, Dan Rhodes, Jonathan
Carroll, etc.), connect with people who share similar tastes in literature,
and again, keep abreast of events like lectures and launches and even
secondhand book sales.”

JOHN BENGAN, fictionist: “It’s a great and quick venue to share


a draft to a few friends, maybe let them see and comment on what
we’ve been working on. Although I’m talking about other people
here and not really answering the first question. In my case though,
maybe coming with a clever status message, I guess, helps me find a
good line or two for an actual story. I get to read other people’s works
a lot through Facebook, so maybe that helps me as a writer? I see a
lot of my FB friends posting their own poems and short short stories
just to share them, not necessarily for comment, although sometimes
they do get feedback. So, I don’t really know what Facebook means
for most readers, other than that it’s another place to continue the act
of reading. It may seem really trivial at first, Facebooking, but let’s
face it most of us are addicted to it. So at least we get to still read
posts tagged to us, or to our friends, while we’re stalking. It’s quick
publishing and instant readership! The quality of what you get to
read on FB though is another issue. It may still come down to who
your friends are.”

FRANK CIMATU, poet and journalist: “I stalk other writers at least


with their statuses and activities. I look at the links the writers want to
share and also I find it more convenient and much easier to post links
and find things that I want rather than with my blog. So Facebook
has become another virtual scrapbook for me. As always, dealing
with people, I don’t really mind if they love or hate what I post but
I do listen to what they say. Journalistically, I have written a lot of
stories through Facebook. I learned that ‘walling’ is better because
people you haven’t ‘walled’ actually gave the better replies. I am
not so fastidious about friends that I friend (although I try not to get
politicians) because they can be potential readers.”

EDGAR CALABIA SAMAR, fictionist: “Facebook is the only social


networking site I actively use these days (I quit Friendster and
Multiply; haven’t tried Twitter, Hi5 et. al.)—and as a writer, I use it

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54 THE LITERARY FACEBOOK
primarily for that—networking. I’ve met a lot of people online via
Facebook who were initially readers of my novel (most of them high
school students); they told me that they searched for me online and
were eventually led to my Facebook profile. Thus I use this to keep
connections with fellow writers, readers and potential buyers of my
books (yes, I’m no longer ashamed of that; I realized if I don’t want
my books bought by many, why bother to have them published at
all, right?). I think Facebook is important for readers (I am obviously
a reader, too, and I try to introduce other novelists in my Atisan
Novels blog, which I promote heavily here on Facebook), especially
of contemporary literature, for them to get a sense of the dynamism
in current literary production—that they can interact with writers;
dead authors of textbooks past will soon have to give way to new
writers who make use of technology, the Internet, and most of the
time, Facebook, as platform of self-advertisement. Online presence I
think is very important for writers at present, especially because most
of their readers (i.e., literate) access this technology almost on a daily
basis—and how often do these people actually visit a (non-online)
bookstore in a week, in a month, in a year?”

KENNETH YU, fictionist and publisher: “As a writer, I’m able to connect
with other writers around the world. Virtual networking, I guess.
Though I’m not that ‘talkative,’ it’s nice to just lurk and see what more
outgoing writers are up to via their Wall. Some of these writers write
about their creative processes; it’s always interesting and informative
to see how others come up with their tales; I simply take what I can
learn from the experiences of other writers. On a lesser note, I use
Facebook too to plug what pieces of mine get published, but since
I don’t get published often, that’s rare. As a reader, I would think
Facebook is very helpful. Since other writers update their statuses,
one is always kept abreast of their latest published stories. If the tales
are online, they’re easy to find and read. Ditto for publishers and
editors who also let the public know about their latest releases. It’s
like, or rather, it is, a live, updated feed of what pieces have been most
recently released, a real boon for readers.”

From their replies, we can make several common observations


about Facebook’s role in our lives as writers:

1. Facebook is a tool we use for networking with fellow writers,


which also enables us to share content—our stories, essays, and

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I.R. CASOCOT 55
poems in progress—which always lead to helpful feedback.
2. Facebook is also a chance to recapture a community of people
who share your interests—especially helpful for those who are
expatriates.
3. Facebook is a platform that helps humanize the writer to his or
her reader, and allows interaction between the two.
4. Facebook is a tool for marketing one’s work—your published
story in a magazine, your new book, your new play, and others.
5. Facebook is a virtual scrapbook, a repository or an extension of
one’s writings.
6. Facebook is a tool you can use to get the pulse on what your
readership is looking for.
7. And, finally, Facebook is a platform for various writing projects, a
place where you can pitch ideas with writers and editors.

But I am primarily concerned with Facebook as a literary end-


product, or, if I may dare say, “Facebook as literature.” Can there
be such a thing? Can Facebook be literary? These questions occurred
to me when I observed that even when Facebook is often described
as “a waste of time” which should be better off spent finishing our
next novel, most of the things that I do on Facebook—aside from the
casual surfing from one personal page to the next—is actually writing.
I observed the same thing with other writers in my network as well.
Sometimes, this takes the form of sharing poetry and flash fiction in
the Notes section of Facebook.
But the writing endeavor that is most closely associated with
Facebook is the status update—that 420-character “message”
following your name that asks you to express whatever is in your
head—be it a casual observation, a rant, or whatever—that is
immediately shared, from the moment you touch the publish button,
to the rest of the world.
This is a possible, unexamined mine for literary expression. Of
course, in ordinary, non-literary hands, they can be equally vexing
in their gibberish, ungrammatical hellishness. But in the hands of
seasoned writers, they become something else—a window to a
literature in a hurry, a miniature literature.
Anne Trubek, in her online article “The Art of the Status Update,”
identifies four kinds of status updates: [1] the Prosaic—which
describes exactly what the author is doing (i.e., “Ian is writing an
article”); [2] the Informative—in which the author uses the status
update as a medium for sharing information (i.e., “Ian wants you to

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56 THE LITERARY FACEBOOK

read this essay on Facebook status updates as a form of literature”);


[3] the Clever or Funny—which is fairly self-explanatory and might
say something like, “Ian thinks McDonald’s slipped a tiny circus,
complete with clown car, into his cheeseburger”); and [4] finally
the Nonsensical—in which the author indulges his most poetic
sensibilities (i.e., “Ian wishes he could float into the darkness with the
stars”), or something else.
It is this “something else” that fascinates me more, and over the
past few months, I have increasingly thought of Facebook status
updates as the Internet-age evolution to two old literary forms—the
drama and the haiku.
When I say drama, I mean the canned and popular variety that has
governed our fascination via serialized komiks and radio dramas and
television soap operas—episodic tales of fascinating twists and turns
that people follow, often religiously. I’ve since found—especially in
my own experience—that status updates satisfy that old craving in
Facebook form. In detailing dramatic moments in our lives, we tell a
story, we tell a narrative. And people actually follow these moments
that you post about as if you are their own version of a Facebook
reality show. You will know this because everywhere you go, there
is always bound to be a friend you haven’t seen for some time who
is still privy to these twists and turns in your status updates—and
wants to know more. This is heaven for the writer with exhibitionist
tendencies. But many of these writers are also aware that while they
tread the fine line of privacy, their Facebook life is only a concentrated
focus of only one or two aspects of their real lives. One writer friend
once told me that in many ways his Facebook profile is a character
that he has forged based on aspects of himself—but it is not him him.
“It is a character for the Role Playing Game or RPG that is Facebook,”
he said.
Let us examine another literary possibility of the status update…
Trubek defines the possibilities of the status update in three ways:
“First, there is the question of form. Facebook requires your name to
be the first word of every update. Relentlessly first-person, the status
update is akin to a lyric poem, dominated by the speaker, the ‘I’.”
She also posits: “Another defining formal quality is length.
Several of my friends remark that the status update is haiku-like in its
strictness about brevity. The poet Troy Jollimore compares the status
update to an epitaph, and notes that ‘we might think of one’s epitaph
as the very last status update.’”
And finally: “Another quality of the status update is that it is

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I.R. CASOCOT 57
temporally defined. ‘Update’ suggests one is always writing about
the just-arrived present, and assumes a reader’s familiarity with the
past (something that can be updated). DeSales Harrison, a professor
at Oberlin College, sums up the temporality of a status update as: ‘the
form equidistant from sky writing and the tattoo.’”
The poet Allan Popa has a problem with this, though, when he
decried Facebook, in an email, as a waste of time spent on the fleeting,
the hurried, and the fetish of the now: “Yun nga lang, sa palagay ko,
panibagong kaagaw sa panahon at atensyon ng mambabasa ang Facebook.
Nakatutok ang aktibidad dito sa pangkalahatan sa ‘pangmadalian,’ ‘ang
ngayon-lamang’ at ‘ang mabilisan.’ Pero ang sinumang seryosong mambabasa
ay kakayaning malabanan ang pwersa nito para mas mapahalagahan ang mga
bagay na ‘nananatili,’ ‘pangmatagalan,’ at ‘mabagal’ na siyang naibabahagi
ng karanasan ng pagbabasa ng panitikan. Sa bagal naipapadanas ang tagal
at talaga ng panahon. (It’s just that, in my opinion, Facebook is another
of those that rob the reader’s time and attention. The activities here
are generally focused on the ‘ephemeral,’ ‘the whatever’s-present’
and ‘the hurried.’ But any serious reader will be able to fight against
this force in order to give value to the things that ‘remain,’ ‘will last,’
‘are not hurried’—which the reading of literature is able to share. In
this slowness do we experience the time’s length and fate.).”1
The essayist and fictionist Rowena Tiempo Torrevillas (personal
communication, January 2009) also weighs in on these very
possibilities, and she wrote in an email to me:

This is a truly timely topic, Ian. You and many others … are realizing the tremendous
potential for reaching an audience unimaginable before our time: instantaneously,
and with geometrically expanding numbers.
The downside of social networking in its present form is its mind-boggling
triviality. How many ‘friends’ have we blocked simply because they have the
compulsion to announce to the world at large what they ate for breakfast? (Sheesh, I
keep expecting a ‘status report’ to arrive from one of these get-a-life-already deadbeats
saying, ‘I have constipation.’ And then, one hour later, ‘Yehey! I POOPED!’)
A frequent poster has this diarrhea need to boast about the books he’s reading,
name-dropping his current literary crushes with a self-congratulatory eagerness that
I find both pathetic and annoying...but at least his pretenses at literary discourse are
a relief from the usual snoringly autistic posting of ‘I will go to bed now.’
The terseness of the Facebook format should encourage pithy utterances; but
instead, as you know, the bulk of what we wade through it pure dreck.
Thus, for me at present. Facebook is 90% a waste—and a waster—of time. Its
only virtue for a writer is that one’s words, thrown into that void of unknowing,
do sometimes get caught...and held, and maybe even thrown back with a new spin
added to the toss of language. As with you, I think.
The 17th-century Japanese (Tokugawa dynasty) game of linked verse, from

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58 THE LITERARY FACEBOOK
which the haiku originated, was far more disciplined and profound. But who
knows? —The romance of time has added its patina of glamour to those 17-syllable
observations on fish soup and cherry-blossom petals.
Maybe Facebook will lead to something akin to the haiku, transcending its
essential ephemerality. As long as it remains participatory, it’s a marvelous vehicle.
But I fear the lines of words, thrown like fragile cables from writer to reader, are lost
in the clutter of cyberspace.
I doubt it, though. This is my conclusion to my thought that the brevity of
Facebook postings might someday produce a haiku-like interchange between writer
and reader. I do doubt it. My thanks for your thoughtfulness, Ian, and for making me
think, too. Cheers, Weena.

I am partial to the notion that Facebook is a “waster of time,”


as described so by Popa and Torrevillas, which points to the much-
described addicting aspect of the website, as attested to by John Bengan.
(The clinical psychologist Michael A. Fenichel has coined the term
“Facebook Addiction Disorder” to describe this, although sufficient
literature on this has yet to be fully considered.) But I also think that
the time is not yet right, or ripe, to dismiss the literary possibilities
of Facebook—especially the status update—as something that has
no gravity for serious consideration, as something fleeting that is the
child of momentary whimsy, as Popa describes it. The “bulk of pure
dreck” that Torrevillas describes is true, given cursory examination of
status updates in general, but this is true for most of everything that
we consume in living culture, even in literary publishing. Torrevillas,
however, does end her observations with a hopeful, although still
doubtful, view of the literary possibilities of Facebook, given “the
patina of time” and “practice towards ephemerality.”
I remain hopeful that there is such a possibility because I do see
status updates—by writers as diverse as David Rankin, Susan Orleans,
and Margaret Atwood—in Facebook and also Twitter that strike me
as dealing close with a literary sensibility. Can it lead to literature? In
the game of popular literature, it has led to eventual book publication
for Justin Halpern whose Twitter page “Shit My Dad Says” proved so
popular, the book deal followed.
In a 2011 conference, the Canadian author Margaret Atwood had
this say about Twitter as literature:

A lot of people on Twitter are dedicated readers. Twitter is like all of the other short
forms that preceded it. It’s like the telegram. It’s like the smoke signal. It’s like writing
on the washroom wall. It’s like carving your name on a tree. It’s a very short form
and we use that very short form for very succinct purposes. There is a guy out there
who is writing 140-character short stories—I just followed him today … but that’s the
exception. It’s sort of like haikus [and] prose....

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I.R. CASOCOT 59
I would say that reading, as such, has increased. And reading and writing skills
have probably increased because what all this texting and so forth replaced was the
telephone conversation….
People have to actually be able to read and write to use the Internet, so it’s a great
literacy driver if kids are given the tools and the incentive to learn the skills that allow
them to access it.

The New York Times’ Randy Kennedy also reports about Lowboy
author John Ray who uses Twitter to do a serialized novel in Twitter
about a character named Citizen. He writes about the challenges of the
format as a creative writing tool: “I don’t view the constraints of the
format as in any way necessarily precluding literary quality. It’s just a
different form. And it’s still early days, so people are still really trying
to figure out how to communicate with it, beyond just reporting that
their Cheerios are soggy.” In the same news item, Kennedy quotes the
linguist Ben Zimmer who described the “growing popularity of the
service as a creative outlet” as springing from the same “impulse that
goes into writing a sonnet, of accepting those kinds of limits.”
I have observed something similar in Twitter status updates
though that has led me to believe that there may indeed be literariness
that can be gleaned in the short bursts of expressions we post on
social networks. In 2010, just in time for the Philippine Independence
Day celebration on June 12, a group of writers who do primarily
speculative fiction came up with the challenge of writing revisionist
historical fiction in the 140 characters allowed for a Twitter post. The
efforts were conveniently grouped together by the hashtag2 #RP612fic,
eventually becoming a virtual anthology of speculative fiction—
featuring stories that were grounded in a common convention: a
limitation in the number of characters used.
My own entries in this Twitter project were experiments in brevity,
something I welcomed as a literary exercise in form, and I was aware
of the fact that I gave the same amount of effort that I give long-form
writing in the telling of my stories. Consider the following:

The old cardinal’s voice broke through the February air over the radio. “Please come.
Come join us,” he pleaded. But nobody came.

The crowd was lively, and the little woman was about to cast her candidacy for
Congress in this town. Suddenly, a gun shot rang.

Marcela did not like the red cloth as she sewed the flag. “What if I made this pink?
Wouldn’t it be fabulous?” she said.

“Dear Paciano. What was I thinking? A depressing novel about a guy who goes

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60 THE LITERARY FACEBOOK
home? I’ll write a romance novel instead. Love, Pepe.”

“Where’s Lapu-Lapu?” the angry conquistador snarled as he stormed the beach with
his men. The guide blinked. “You mean, the fish?”

“Tell me you love me,” Emilio said. “But I don’t love you,” said Andres. Emilio
sighed, “Then you leave me no choice. You die.”

“Okay I will marry you,” the young Imelda smiled. The young politician was happy.
She said, “Imelda Aquino. Does that sound okay?”

“Transfer it to June 12,” Diosdado gravely said. “My 17-year old daughter wants me
to take her shopping on July 4, that’s why.”

My effort3 and that of the others soon made me remember and


consider a possible grandfather to status updates taken to the heights
of literary practice. Ernest Hemingway reportedly once wrote a very
short story that consisted of just the following: “For sale: baby shoes,
never worn.” Six words. And they contained a universe of meaning
and the narrative demands of fiction, evoking as much as a regular
story could.
Who’s to say status updates cannot do the same?

ACKNOWLEDGMENT

The author would like to acknowledge the National Commission for Culture and
the Arts. This paper is modified from the lecture for the panel on online literature
delivered for Taboan 2010: The Second International Philippine Writers Festival, 9-11
February 2010, Cebu City, Philippines.

NOTES
1
Translation from the Filipino by Edgar Calabia Samar.

2
A “hashtag” is a tagging convention utilized by Twitter users for grouping posts
by various users that dwell on similar topics or issues. This can be recognized by a
short one-word category name following the pound sign. The hashtag makes it easy
for users to follow a Twitter “conversation,” enabling them to read and respond to
“tweets” by other users that they don’t even “follow.”

3
These pieces of “lit-tweets” subsequently published as “Alternate History” in
Philippine Speculative Fiction 6, edited by Kate Osias and Nikki Alfar in 2011.

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I.R. CASOCOT 61

REFERENCES

Kennedy, R. (2011, March 20). How Do I Love Thee? Count 140 Characters. The
New York Times. Online. Retrieved March 19, 2011 from http://www.nytimes.
com/2011/03/20/weekinreview/20twitterature.html

Margaret Atwood says Twitter, internet boost literacy. CBCNews. Online. Retrieved
December 5, 2011 from http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/story/2011/12/05/
margaret-atwood-digital-twitter-publishing.html

Trubek, A. (nd.) The art of the status update. Good. Online. Retrieved January 26,
2009 from http://www.good.is/post/the-art-of-the-status-update

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


The Constraints School Toward
Good Local Governance:
Local Governments of the Philippines
Circa 2001—2010

Aser B. Javier
University of the Philippines—Los Baños
College, Laguna

This paper aims to account the constraints school that emerged


in the local governments of the Philippines from the period 2001-
2010. The constraints school argues that changes in the external
landscape represented by national institutional indiscretion limits
the internal landscape that local actors must deal with. This
paper argues that the national tradition of governance shapes
and influences local institutional factors and holds the key to
the constraints school toward good local governance in the
Philippines. It does so by examining the national-local experience
and the interactions among these factors through three cases.
The study found out that a three-level dynamics influences
the shape of local institutions. The first level dynamics refers
to the national formal normative orientations that characterize
the national government as a political institution that influences
local governments. Second is the local government's capacity
that structure local actions towards dependency. The third refers
to the politics-corporate balance of local government policy on
decentralization. This paper concludes that the evolution of the
constraints school implicitly establishes the outcomes of the current
local governance in the Philippines as an unintended consequence
of the national practice of decentralization throughout the nine-
year period.

Keywords: constraints, local governance, governance values,


constraints school, governance, local governments

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A.B. JAVIER 63
Introduction

A
major issue confronting developing countries that are today
decentralized concerns the experience of how national
normative orientations, local government capacities,
and the need for corporatization are used by local institutions to
govern. The Philippines portrays a similar scenario in its 19 years
of decentralization. These concerns range from the practice of new
responsibilities placed on national leadership, citizens, and local
institutions in general within an environment of global pressure. These
concerns, however, are not new, but what remains far from certain is
the dynamics by which these national experiences and local practices
in decentralization and governance as a whole have been taken up
and thus create a new dimension in the local government politics. The
work reported in this paper assumed that the way of national tradition
of governance and the dynamics of its implementation process affect
local politico-administrative system thus determining the constraints
school in good local governance.
The paper investigates the manifestations of the constraints
school viewed from the influence of the national governments to
local governments. The study is drawn from secondary neo-liberal
and institutional and international relations literature. It depicts how
the Philippines draws understanding from three national-local case
experiences studying the local government as institutions that evolved
due to the decentralization process. Cognizant that local governments
are part of the state and are the beneficiaries of decentralized powers,
the researcher investigated the arguments of a constraints school.

Elements of the Constraints


School Discourse

What is the Constraints School?

The body of knowledge and analytical tools of the constraints school


came from the experience in the natural sciences and are based on
a rigorous, but easily understood, cause-and-effect logic (Goldratt,
1984). Goldratt argued that the constraints school is like a chain with a
weak link such that in any complex system at any point in time, there
is most often one aspect that limits its ability to achieve the goal. For
that system to attain a significant improvement, the constraint must

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64 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL
be identified and the whole system must be managed with it in mind.
Goldratt referred to his work as the theory of constraints (TOC).
Earlier, Leibig (cited in Brown, 1942) likened the constraints to
that of a process in crop science where it was found that increasing
the amount of abundant nutrients would not improve plant growth.
Increasing only the amount of the limiting nutrient (insufficient in
relation to “need“) leads to growth or improved crop. The idea of
Leibig developed from Carl Sprengel (1828) and became known as
Liebig's Law or the Law of the Minimum where growth is controlled
not by the totality of the resources available but by the scarcest resource
(limiting factor), which in this case are referred to as the constraints.
Institutional growth in this sense is limited by the “nutrients” from
the insufficient supply (Brown, 1942).
Until very recently, Weiss (2003) stated that powers have been
severely constrained or have entered the era of state denial. These
constraints result from presuppositions of the state’s loss of power
and its perceived obsolescence as an organizing power. Weiss further
contends that domestic institutions are the starting point to account
for the impact of external forces like globalization. Weiss (2003)
says that the constrained state powers are ultimately transformed
by globalization and there is now a need to bring in the domestic
institutions, such as the local government units (LGUs).
Further, Clingermayer and Feiock (2003) said that in an uncertain
world, consistent trends in politics and policymaking would be either
caused by or represented by institutional irregularities. Institutions
themselves are the products of other forces (i.e. sets of preferences,
economic or military power, and changes in technology or relative
prices), but once created they become a force with which other forces
and actors must contend with. From this view, institutions and
what they have become, constitute the “rules of the game” for any
political society (North, 1990). Taking the domestic institutions at
one level lower would construe that local governments are the best
benchmarks of states’ performance. In this paper, the constraints
school (e.g. Weiss, 2003; Lingermayer & Feiock, 2003; and Goldratt,
1984) argues that changes in the external landscape of the LGUs and
represented by national institutional indiscretion, limit the internal
landscape that local actors must deal with. This national landscape
of course does not exclude the global governance paradigmatic shifts
pushed by supra-national institutions to which developing countries
have been subservient.
However, there are constraints school theorists who would

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A.B. JAVIER 65
generally assert that national governments are no longer the central
focus of power. This is a consequence of loss of control due to the
numerous actors already at play in governance (Held & McGrew,
1998; Rosenau, 2000 as cited by Weiss 2003). However, the state
would not simply retreat and surrender its loss of effective political
power. This non-surrender is treated differently and is influenced
by the scheming use of political power as well as the bargaining
and negotiation process to regain loss of centrality. This “short cut”
process to development leads to unfortunate outcomes, such as the
“filling in of the state” (Jessop, 2004), where there are institutional
and political settlements of “holding on to power and authority” by
the state and the “yielding in” of local governments.” This leads to
what Gera (2008) refers to as two-track implementation scheme of
decentralization.
Harry Blair wrote in his USAID report (cited by Kimura, 2011):

Historically, decentralization initiatives have not enjoyed great success, largely for
two reasons: all too often, despite their rhetoric, central governments do not truly
want to devolve real power to the local level; and when significant authority is
devolved, a disproportionate share of the benefits is often captured by local elites.
The new democratic variant of decentralization, however, may overcome these
problems by introducing greater participation, accountability, and transparency in
local governance, and by empowering marginal groups. It also offers more scope for
local revenue generation by linking services to local payment for them. (p. vi)

Complementarily, international relations theories identify parallel


constraints through the conception of the politics in the field. This is
characterized as the ‘politics of yielding in.’ It is argued that politics
from below may be transformative or dependent in nature because
of the domination of politics from above. This hegemony causes the
eventual yielding in of local institutions; thus, creating the constraints
of “local development.” Often this view is disregarded due to
globalization, which all states or countries for that matter have to
contend with (Boggs, 1986; Yauval-Davis, 1997; Fraser, 1997; Hamel,
2001; Harding, 1992; Keck & Sikkink, 1998; and Woods, 1995 as cited
by Maiguashca, 2003). This results in the shaping of new forms of
national-local institutional arrangements at play, where powers are
shared as a result of financial difficulties through the Internal Revenue
Allotment (IRA) vis-à-vis the increasing demand for social services at
the local government level.
This contention pressures poor countries to do a benchmark
study of themselves with reference to rich countries. This, however,

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66 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL
creates a pseudo good governance agenda, which in the first place
is very difficult to attain. This is the gist of the arguments of Grindle
(2004) who proposed that poor countries adapt a good enough
governance agenda in place of good governance. The course of action
is associated with ‘playing catch-up,’ where the developed countries
do not earn dividends. The inability to attain the agenda has created
a new culture and behavior in local governments such that politics is
prioritized over managerialism.
At the local organizational level, this goes with the third idea
of the constraints school, which emanated from a culture that has
developed because of the practice of decentralization. Edgar Schein
(1985) took it up from an organizational culture perspective where
language and formal and informal boundaries are set up. This refers
to “the way we do things around here,” “the way we think about
things around here,” or “the commonly held values and beliefs held
within an organization” (Hudson 1999 as cited by Schein, 1985),
including “the overall ‘character’ of an organization” (Handy, 1988
as cited by Schein, 1985). Schein (1985) argues that these values
now shape what governance will be. This shaping of governance is
now taught to others (whether formal or non-formal), i.e. capacity
development, considering its working in the past, whether correct
or incorrect through the years. Behaviorally speaking, this also
constitutes the organizational behavior (Robbins & Judge, 2006) of
LGUs. The constraints school from Schein’s work shows, in a more
pragmatic sense, that the governing practice of LGUs emanate
from their perception of how they perceive national governments’
governance of the state based on their developed capacities.
We now see a multifaceted interaction involving a complex array
of actors. In this situation, there is usually an attempt to seize the
interest at whatever levels, whether national or local, by each of the
actors, creating a contest of politics of influence and negotiation. This
is where the local governments usually yield. This now becomes the
core of the constraints school—seen as the new rules of the game in
Philippine local governments, especially that despite decentralization,
only about 10% of 1,696 local government units have maximized their
new corporate powers (Amatong, 2005 as cited by Javier & Mendoza
2007).

From Governance to Government?

In this paper, it is assumed that through the adoption of a

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A.B. JAVIER 67
decentralization policy via the Local Government Code (LGC) of 1991
(Republic Act No. 7160), the Philippines ventured into the complex
world of governance. This assumption is indicative of a purposive
desire for institutional change, especially in the formulation of the
concept of governance. This paper was thought out from the idea of
James Rosenau’s (in Rosenau & Czempiel, 1992) ‘governance without
government’ because of the perceived state governance inadequacies
that shape the governance of local governments. While Rosenau
generally did not qualify developing countries as having governance,
he distinguished the government from governance by suggesting
that the government refers to the activities that are backed by formal
authority, while governance refers to the activities backed by shared
goals.
This idea of governance in developing countries comes from
the presumption of the major public sector reforms that emanated
from the Thatcher and Reagan era in the late 1980s and signaled
the start of a global spillover of massive reforms (Kooiman, 1993)
creating both a renewed vigor for public sector reforms and hope for
the governmental institutions. This happened at the same time with
the massive public awareness of the dysfunction of the state (Bevir,
2007). These arguments later became the platform of participatory
and accountability anchors that the state, business, and civil society
constructed to form the decentralization mechanics and policies.
In the Philippines, the twenty-year Marcos rule and the growing
movement of non-government organizations (NGOs), later termed
as the civil society, can trace its roots from post-war agrarian unrest.
Various movements, parties, ideologies, and personalities converged
with the idea to ultimately topple the Marcos regime. Thus, when
people power happened in 1986, the transition government of Aquino
focused on restoring democracy and eventually distributing the
powers across the state.
Redemocratization through decentralization became the hallmark
of the transition government of the Aquino administration. The
efficiency factor in devolution began to surface during the Ramos
administration. The government vigorously pursued market reforms.
Trade, banking, and industry were liberalized. A privatization
program was pursued to relieve the central government of several
functions where it has no comparative advantage (Guevara, 2000).
Largely, public sector reforms in the first wave were based on new
public management (NPM) principles (Bevir, 2007) particularly on
corporatization and democratization and their combinations. Javier

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68 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL
(2002) labeled this as the emergence of public entrepreneurship in
the Philippine local governments. The local governments, prescribed
by a host of actors and stakeholders including donors, national
government agencies, civil movements and the private sector shaped
up, and soon best-practice approaches or simply being entrepreneurial
mushroomed, validating that the Philippines’ decentralization is
patterned after supplants of NPM. This constitutes the first wave
of decentralization or the Philippines’ manifestations of its entry to
governance.
The venture of Philippine LGUs into its supposed corporate
existence can be classified from both the governance definition
of World Bank (1987) as NPM and the United Nations as social
development1 and a third view of governance from a neo-
institutionalist perspective, where governance is defined as the
steering of institutional arrangements. This steering of institutional
arrangements presupposes of course whether it is the state or the
LGUs steering their institutions. This does not preclude the idea
that the Philippines ventured into decentralization because of both
exogenous and endogenous pressures.2
The LGC of 1991 has changed many features of Philippine
LGUs towards corporate governance. This argument emanates from
the general powers and attributes that establish the political and
corporate nature of local government units (Chapter 2, Section 14-15).
It promulgates that

every local government unit created or recognized under this Code is a body politic
and corporate endowed with powers to be exercised by it in conformity with the law.
As such, it shall exercise powers as a political subdivision of the national government
and as a corporate entity representing the inhabitants of its territory.

The success of the LGUs’ corporate existence can be summarized


by the basic premise of a business principle—profitability.
In some ways then, the quality of governance, or to put it
succinctly, good governance, is measured using Bevir’s definition
(2007, p. xl), referring to the institutional barriers to corruption and
a functioning market economy. Further, Kooiman (1993) defines
governance from an interaction and network perspective that emerges
in a socio-political system because of the common efforts of all actors.
In this definition, the system becomes once again a progression from
local government to local governance and from the hierarchical to
the inclusion of other actors. This managerialism provides for the
inclusion of actors, meaning a focus on establishing networks and on

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A.B. JAVIER 69
results.
From these definitions, coupled with Rosenau’s standpoint on
governance definitions, the results from using the complex interplay
of actors with shared goals become the basis of governance success.
Grindle (2004), however, already presupposes that developing
countries will have a difficult time to achieve success based on the
good enough governance agenda. The limited capacities and gaps in
governance mean there is more to the gradation in the understanding
of the evolution of local governments. There are no technical or easy
fixes to what is inevitably a long, slow, reversible, and frustrating path
towards better performing local governments. This is because as B.
C. Smith wrote, “decentralization is essentially the relation between
center and local governments” ( 1984).
Understandably, based on the results of several studies, local
resistance to national mandates that impose costs is even more severe
when state oversight is weak and when the policy goals of the state
government are vague (Grindle, 2004). However, in the Philippines
and in most developing countries whose democracies are still
young, national unfunded mandates while displacing local priorities
in favor of state priorities are embraced. This is largely because of
loose local development planning, budgeting and capacity, creating
state dependence and consequently constraining the management
flexibility and autonomy of LGUs. This creates the opportunity for
the state to exercise its authority leaving the LGUs to look up to the
state, even if they are the final links of the chain in the government
hierarchy. This second wave of decentralization is characterized by
the difficulty of both the state and local governments to practice and
meet decentralization objectives and is leaned towards politics. This
reverses the trends from governance to government.

From Theory to Evidence

The national government's desire for development cannot be doubted.


What makes the national government actions or inactions doubtful
are the deep-seated distrust that has developed as a result. The
conversation of former President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo with a
Commission on Election (COMELEC) official happened at the height
of the presidential elections in 2004 and has rocked and continually
moves the sentiments of the people against the national government.
This opened up the proverbial black box of governance so to speak of
the Arroyo administration and stirred up the citizens, the media, and

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70 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL
the political opposition to advocate for impeachment complaints—
filed year in and year out since Arroyo’s assumption into office. The
continuous high distrust rating of the former President in particular
and her government in general went on a five-year downturn,
unprecedented in Philippine history since 19863 (Figure 1).
To move status quo, Kurt Lewin’s (1943) famous force-field
analysis suggested the influence on the passive to become either
negatives or positives. In the case of the Philippines, the negative
far outweighs the positive through the trust ratings (Social Weather
Station, 2008), making fundamental changes for reforms very difficult.
This fundamental change is affecting the functions, scope, and tier of
local governing. Thus, economic interventions, such as pushing for
the expanded value added tax, have sounded national alarms for
citizens’ concern and worry even if these meant increasing revenue
bases. The initiative led to the thinking that the expanded value added
tax might be used for political purposes. In fact it caused the defeat
of very popular senators for their reelection bid and twenty others
in the former President’s 24-strong party senatorial line-up in the
national elections of 2007. This perceived weak political leadership
consequently causing ineffective institutions has undermined reform
efforts such as lifestyle checks, the new procurement law, and several

Source: Social Weather Station, 2008

Figure 1. Net Satisfaction Ratings of Philippine Presidents Since 1986.

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A.B. JAVIER 71
national pronouncements on corruption among public officials
(Llanto & Gonzales, 2007, not in the list). Pierre and Rothstein (2008)
attribute to trust impartiality, accountability, and other governance
qualities, which in turn become a major precondition for reforms.
However, at the local government level, the results of the elections
showed that the administration candidates overwhelmingly won.
The LGUs then became the support base of national government.
The meeting of local officials at the Malacanang Palace with former
President Arroyo incited concern from the people as the local
officials were handed out envelopes containing half a million pesos
(Php500,000) which up to now remains unsolved as to what purpose
it would serve the local chief executives. Initially, it was justified as
party funds, then, poverty alleviation funds, and nothing was heard
about this since then. Further, the seven hundred twenty eight million
pesos (PhP728,000,000) fertilizer budget to local governments prior to
the national elections in 2004 was distributed in known urban areas
even in Metro Manila where there are no agricultural lands to speak
of. There were no criteria for the distribution; the fund was distributed
even during an election ban on downloading of funds. This case
caused one high Philippine Department of Agriculture official to be
jailed in Kenosha, Wisconsin in the United States—there allegedly
to escape a Senate inquiry—creating international embarrassment.
The list of irregularities that affect the LGUs as a result of national
traditions of governance is long4 and when it becomes public, the
administration suddenly becomes silent and the supposed offenders
go scot-free. This partly explains local governmental support to the
state, as the windfall largely favors them. (The said official even ran
for the highest elective post in one province in the last elections.)
A very recent blow to autonomy was the peace agreement that
was supposed to be signed by the national government with the
Islamic separatists. The Supreme Court of the Philippines finally
ruled on the issue of the Memorandum of Agreement on Ancestral
Domain (MOA-AD) and ascertained it as unconstitutional. The
MOA-AD was not known among key stakeholders, specifically the
local governments whose geographical areas in Mindanao were
included. It was the local governments, specifically the office of then
Vice Governor Emmanuel Pinol of North Cotabato in Mindanao that
sought a redress in the Supreme Court, as the administration was
defiant. The tribunal refused to go along with the argument of the
Arroyo administration. The secrecy by which the administration
conducted its supposed governing process ran contrary to the basic

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72 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL
tenets of accountability and good governance. Now, war is brewing
again in Mindanao and thousands are displaced.
In the many cases of deemed irregularities, the fundamental
prerequisites of democratic institutions are missing (Crook & Manor
1998; Manor 1999; Bardhan & Mookherjee 2000 as cited by Rodriguez-
Pose & Sandall, 2008), i.e. accountability, and even the credibility and
capacity to govern. Local governments are likely to become captured
by national elites if transactions are without a minimal degree of
accountability thus increasing local rent-seeking. A good case in
point is the devolved function of agriculture extension that has re-
emerged as a centralized feature from the agriculture and fishery
extension system (AFES) proposal under the Strengthening of the
National Extension System to Accelerate Agriculture and Fisheries
Development bill. The policy instrument dictates that the municipal
agriculture staff devolved to the municipalities should be transferred
to the province as the core LGU unit of operation5. These actions by
national governments has been referred to as decentralization within
centralization.

Case One

National Normative Orientation as a Constraints School:


The Case of the Local Financing Policy

In the policy arena of local financing, the LGC of 1991 enables the
LGUs to exercise their power to create and broaden their own sources
for revenue collection and claim their right to a just share in the
national taxes. It also gives the LGUs the power to levy taxes, fees or
charges that would accrue exclusively for their use and disposition.
In addition, the 1996 LGU Financing Framework, developed by the
Philippines Department of Finance (DOF) with assistance from the
World Bank, forms the cornerstone of the existing LGU financing
arrangements. The role of the government credit programs is to pave
the way for a greater private capital markets’ participation in financing
local development. Thus, the main objective of the government
policy is to improve LGUs’ access to private capital markets (Llanto,
Lamberto, Manasan, & Laya, 1998). These objectives of the financing
framework emanate from the recognition that [1] LGUs have varying
levels and records of creditworthiness and bankability, and [2] their
financing needs are huge. Therefore, the private sector (BOT investors,

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A.B. JAVIER 73
bondholders, commercial banks), the GFIs and MDF all have a role
to play in achieving LGU financing needs (1996 LGU Financing
Framework, DOF).
To assist LGUs in the financing scheme of their functions, the LGC
of 1991 provides that approximately 40% of the national government
revenues be distributed to LGUs in the form of internal transfers
(IRA). This allocation gives LGUs of all sizes and all classes a stable
source of revenue. This has also served as collateral against which
almost all loans issued to LGUs have been secured. This corporate
function of local financial planning and management (LFPM) play
a critical role in the management of the LGUs in the Philippines.
Without the IRA, the LGUs would not have been able to issue bonds
or to borrow from the GFIs. Further, concrete action plans were not
formulated and agreed upon by concerned government agencies for
implementation of the 1996 local financing framework, on top of the
concomitant dependence on IRA. As a result, the progress made on
the objectives embodied in the framework has been quite uneven
(Pelligrini, 2006) (See Table 1).
A very good case in point was an experience of the Mandaluyong
City local government. Mandaluyong is one of the metropolitan cities
in Metro Manila that has managed a population growth rate of less
than one percent. The city suffered a decrease by almost sixty million
pesos in the annual share of cities and towns from the proceeds of
the national internal revenue tax collection, the IRA. The IRA was
computed using a formula that took into account population, territory,
and equal sharing. Under the Local Government Code, each province,
city, and municipality’s share is based on the following formula: 50%
for population and 25% each for land area and equal sharing. As a
result, cities with the biggest populations get the highest IRA share.
Those with smaller populations receive less. Former Mayor Benjamin
Abalos Jr. bewailed the fact that cities and towns that successfully
practiced good population management are “punished,” instead of
rewarded, by having their share of national taxes severely cut because
they have managed their population growth very well. In this case,
population growth is managed by a rate of less than one percent (Yap,
2008).
At the same time, many LGUs, particularly municipalities, are
highly dependent on IRA with an average of around 70.7% since
1992 with their own source of revenue averaging only at 25.97%
(Commission on Audit, various years, as cited by Gera, 2008). Further,
it has been found that releases are not timely and appropriations

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74 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL
not full. Manasan (2007) said that the mandated IRA share was not
appropriated in full for the fiscal years 2000, 2001, and 2004, while the
IRA appropriations were not released in full for fiscal years 1998 and
1999. The IRA appropriations were also not released on time for fiscal
year 1999. Thus, many LGU chief executives, especially those outside
Luzon, have made follow-ups with the Department of Budget and
Management (DBM). Further, many LGUs have avoided updating
their tax codes as there is no incentive element to the IRA transfer
formula. They have found it more convenient to avoid raising taxes (a
power granted under the LGC) by relying on IRA transfers (Pelligrini,
2006). Thus, former Secretary of Finance Juanita Amatong commented
that only about ten percent of the total LGUs have maximized their
corporate powers ( 2005).
Scholars like Llanto et al. (1998) identified several constraints that
further impede the development of local financing in various arenas.
Among these are: the lack of reliable information about LGUs; the
possibility of political interference in project management or in debt
servicing; uncertainty in the management capacity at the LGU level;
uncertainty in the quality of feasibility studies; lack of an independent
rating agency; lack of a market for secondary trading; and lack
of access to IRA as security for LGU obligations. This makes the
objective of LGU Financing Framework of accommodating the more
creditworthy LGUs to private sources of capital mainly untouched.
One reason for this is the heavy dependence on the IRA and the very
weak revenue generating capacity of LGUs, specifically their local
economic enterprises (LEEs). In a 2007 study by Manasan, it was
found that the LEEs that posted net loss were 77% in the province,
63% in the cities, and 56% in the municipalities. Another reason is the
very weak enabling local policies enacted by LGUs to support local
economic development (LED). The results of studies such as these
weaken the argument of corporatization of LGUs.

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A.B. JAVIER 75
Table 1.

The LGUs Financing Framework Practice Today.

1996 LGU Financing


Framework Objectives Current Financing Framework Practice

1. Number of LGUs 1. Less than 10% of all LGUs exercise their new
practicing their financing mandate (Amatong, 2005)
corporate powers

2. Develop the LGU 2. Only 21 of 1,696 or 1.24% of all LGUs have issued
bond market bonds (BLGF, 2005)

3. Increase LGU use 3. Only 15 of 1,696 or .88% of all LGUs have BOT projects
of BOT (build- (BOT Center, 2005)
operate-transfer)
arrangements

4. Improve the capacity 4. Only 8 of 171 or 4.8% of all LGU awardees of Galing
of LGUs to raise Pook are LFPM-related (Galing Pook Foundation, 2006)
their own revenues
(Excellence in
Corporate Practice)

5. Promote LGU access 5. Private banks are not encouraged to provide LGU
to private banks financing schemes and arrangements

Source: Javier, A.B. & Mendoza, R.R. (2007). Organizational Assistance to Local Financial
Planning and Management in the Philippines.

Case Two

Local Governments’ Capacities as a Constraints School:


The Case of Local Actors Association

In the Philippines, an association of local government units’ officials


has been established with membership reaching more than 15,000.
Since 2004, continuing capacity-building programs have been offered
and conducted to equip the members to become effective legislators.
This association has also launched a continuing local legislation
education program which members can avail of depending on the
decisions made by the executive committee. These are subject to the

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76 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL
approval of the members’ travel and attendance by their respective
local government units, usually by the mayor.
Essentially, the education program has as its focus the leadership
capability of the members. The Local Government Academy (LGA-
DILG), having been able to co-sponsor a training event in 2004
is supportive of this initiative. A policy development course, in
cooperation with a leading university, also supported this capability
building initiative in 2007.
However, the absence of a standard legislative capacity-building
framework hindered the progression of the initiative. The former must
be put in place to provide the necessary legislative support system
with backing from the academe and full assistance mechanisms
for its members and the community. This is critical to the effective
functioning of the association.
Factors affecting the progression of the initiatives to strengthen
the association of LGU officials were identified and validated through
a national survey conducted in January 2008. There were 1,466
respondents to the survey. The national executive committee utilized
results of the survey to come up with responsive policy formulation
guidelines and an efficient administration proposal (see Table 2).
The results emphasized the importance of capacity building as
a service of the group. However, it should be noted that capacity-
building ranks only third among the three priorities identified by
the association. The members of the association prioritized their
membership from an administrative benefits standpoint stating they
should be provided health, hospitalization, and scholarships and
from an awards standpoint saying they must be recognized for their
accomplishments.
Further, 94.1% of the respondents called for the clarification
of their roles as legislators, leaders, and politician’s vis-à-vis the
executive branch of the local government hierarchy. This is in the
area of the legislative role perception as confused with executive roles
through their oversight functions of the local bureaucracy. The data
represented glaring governance constraints.

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A.B. JAVIER 77
Table 2.

Summary of Local Capacities as a Constraints School.

Local Government Needs Perspectives Demand Perspectives


Roles

As League Members Provision of benefits Prioritization of administrative


to family dependents benefits and recognition over
capacity building

As Politicians Primacy of political Exposure and orientation


roles over legislative about legislative, community,
roles and citizen engagement

As Legislator Leaders Legislative function as Political role perception as


councilors councilors versus policy
development and enforcement
vis-à-vis the bureaucracy

Knowledge and Research and policy knowledge


background in legislative on new laws
governance
Translation of policies into
poverty alleviation projects
with the LGU executive branch

While the continuing local legislation education program is a


good take-off for interventions, there remains a void on the work to
be fulfilled for the objectives of the members. In particular Section
1.1 and 1.2 of Article IV of their Constitution and by-laws states that
the objective of the group is to establish a nationwide forum to give
life, meaning, and substance to the constitutional mandate on local
autonomy and decentralization of powers and bring the government
closer to the people. Research and policy knowledge on new local
laws and their ability to translate policies into poverty alleviation
programs are acknowledged deficits.
Current leaders of the association are exploring the possibility of
re-creating the existing group and forming an agreement such that it
will be called a Local Legislators Center. The aim of the association
includes contracting out research to study the establishment of a
center. The establishment of the center is aimed to provide grants for
training, credited as degree units. A key feature is also to provide for

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78 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL
the structure and mechanisms of a standard delivery of all capacity-
building programs. Further the center will stress the importance of a
common legislative agenda such as food security.
The initiative is also aimed to progress and incorporate a policy
think tank that provides a nationwide policy service to its members
and the community at large. As such, it is envisioned to transform the
current association and provide an influence in policy formulation
at the national and local levels. The Legislators Center can dispense
policy advice, lobby for, and provide assistance as their key services
on top of the capacity building program.

Case Three

Politics-Corporate Balance as a Constraints School:


The Case of the Participatory Policy on Recall

In the Philippines, the law on decentralization provides both a systems


theory and a network of societal actors’ assumptions in the decision
making process as part of the autonomy provided for by the law on
decentralization. The citizens’ participation is guaranteed under the
Local Government Code (LGC) of 1991 where the LGUs are mandated
to create their local development councils (LDC) to collaboratively
plan and decide for the community’s future. Here 25% of the LDC
members should come from civil society. Citizens’ participation is
likewise guaranteed to recall publicly elected officials as a policy of
the state. This is to ensure accountability of public officials through
recall mechanisms (LGC 2001, Chapter 1, Section 2b) by the citizens or
network of citizens. Recall is a process that allows citizens to remove
and replace a public official before the end of a specific term; thus,
creating a balance tilted towards the LGUs to be more corporate or
managerial in their approach to good local governance.
The law on citizens’ recall as part of the LGC of 2001 was amended
through RA 9244 on February 19, 2004 (Table 3). The amendment
generally provided each LGU an opportunity to classify the total
number of registered voters to allow the petition for local officials to
commence.

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Table 3.

Policy on Citizen Recall of Elective LGU Officials.

Local Government Code of 1991 RA 9244 amendment approved on Feb. 19, 2004

Recall of any elective provincial, At least 20% in the case of local government units
city, municipal, or barangay with a voting population of at least 20,000 but
official may be validly initiated not more than 75,000, provided that in no case
upon petition of at least 25% of shall the required petitioners be less than 5,000
the total number of registered
voters in the local government At least 15% in the case of local government units
unit concerned during the with a voting population of at least 75,000 but not
election in which the local more than 300,000, provided, however, that in no
official sought to be recalled was case shall the required number of petitioners be
elected. At least 25% in the case less than 15,000
of local government units with
a voting population of not more At least 10% in the case of local government
than 20,000 units with a voting population of over 300,000,
provided, however, that in no case shall the
required petitioners be less than 45,000

Over the years, pro-decentralization scholars have pointed to


citizens’ engagement as a mechanism of voice and exit. It pressures the
government to perform well and be accountable in its responsibilities.
These mechanisms extend even within the bounds of removing
public officials through the instrument of recall. The recall of public
officials by the citizens is aimed at an effective and speedy solution
to the problem of officials with unsatisfactory performance. Recall is
a power granted to the people who, in concert, desire to change their
leaders for reasons only they, as a collective, can justify (Angobung
vs. COMELEC, 269 SCRA 245, 1997).
The case of Pampanga Governor Eddie Panlilio was in the news
during this period. Governor Panlilio is a Catholic priest who ran as
governor in the 2007 elections. His bid for office created quite a stir in
both local and national government circles. It has been a public secret
that Pampanga has become a haven for the illegal numbers game,
popularly known as “jueteng.” Thus, a priest running for the highest
local position piqued the interest of the public. Pampanga is also the
hometown of the then President Arroyo and one of her sons served as
a representative. Election polls presented six candidates whose votes
were as follows: Eddie Panlilio (219,706), then Board Member Lilia

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80 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL

Pineda (218,559), and then Governor Mark Lapid (210,876). Panlilio


got only 33.8% of the total vote, but this was enough to give him
victory by a 1,147-vote plurality over his closest rival Pineda. The total
votes cast were 649,844 or about 65% of the estimated one million
voting population (Pascual, 2008). Thus, followers of either Pineda or
Lapid by virtue of the logic of applying RA9244, of at least ten percent
of total votes cast, can mobilize those who voted for them and initiate
the recall against the incumbent, in this case, Governor Panlilio. In
fact, it was a campaign staff of Ms Pineda who filed the citizens recall
and it was the running mate, the current vice governor, Joseller Guiao
who was leading the provincial government to officially fund the
recall by allotting Php20,000,000 of the provincial coffers.
Earlier, in 1997 in Caloocan City in Metro Manila, then incumbent
Mayor Reynaldo Malonzo won over former Mayor Macario Asistio Jr,
a member of the moneyed and well-entrenched political family that
has ruled the city for decades. Malonzo’s recall was the first heavily
publicized practice of recall in the Philippines. In 1996, barangay
captains loyal to Asistio filed a recall petition against Malonzo and
demanded new elections. The group stated that the mayor had lost
the trust and confidence of his constituents for allegedly misusing
funds meant for the city's teachers (PCIJ, 2002). The 1,057 village
officials, constituting a majority of the members of the Preparatory
Recall Assembly of the City of Caloocan, met and upon deliberation
and election, voted for the approval of recall, expressing loss of
confidence in Mayor Malonzo.
The same is true for an economic zone local government, the
Municipality of Cabuyao in the province of Laguna, 45km south of
Manila. Mayor Isidro L. Hemedes, Jr. ran on a platform of change
against a husband and wife team occupying the town hall for a
combined 12 years. Mayor Hemedes won with close to 7,000 more
votes cast for him against the losing mayoralty candidate. The wide
winning margin notwithstanding, a recall petition is still possible
given the number of votes by the losing party. The same scenario
happened as in the first two cases where it was a party mate of the
losing mayoralty candidate who lodged the citizen’s recall. Hearsays
abound regarding the authenticity of the signatures that attested a
vote of no confidence and loss of trust against the incumbent Mayor.
The national COMELEC suspended the recall proceedings against
the incumbent mayor.
In the three cases (the province, the city and a municipality), smart
and manipulative politicians and those who have lost in the elections

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A.B. JAVIER 81
have used the same voice and exit to empower citizens, maneuvering
the citizens through recall elections. This has resulted in the use of
citizens’ engagement to launch a massive campaign against a political
opponent outside the regular schedule of an election. This happens
within the bounds of law that supposedly ensures the participation of
the people for a vote of no confidence against a public official. In order
to capture elective positions that they were unable to gain through the
regular electoral routes, the elite now use this same mechanism. This
situation leaves out corporate efficiency as a major priority in the local
government as almost all politicians are on the lookout for political
survival.

Further Analysis

The three cases suggest that local governments have no specific


distinctiveness as they are shaped by the multiple interactions with
society at various levels. However, the formal authority of how the
national government performs its politico-administrative function
over the local governments has to a large extent shaped what the
LGUs are today. This is because the LGUs’ autonomy provides them
the leeway to move vertically and horizontally within and outside
the bureaucracy. Vertically, the national government still controls
and influences the local governments, as majority of the LGUs are
not into sustainable revenue generation programs, creating a culture
of “holding on to power and authority” by the national government
and the “yielding in” by the local government. Second, party politics
is not influencing voter results; thus, loyalty to persons/candidates
becomes norm.
This ushers in the situation where each of the local governments
have their own understanding and perceptions of how national
governments influence the governance of the local governments.
Rhodes & Bevir (2001) provide a very good complementary decentered
analysis that states that external factors influence governance only
through the ways in which they are understood by the relevant local
actors. How local actors perceive the state structures local actions.
Because a vast majority of the LGUs are not into the practice of their
new corporate functions, they are opting for the safest structuring
of governance, which is state dependence. This explains why the
LGUs are banded by a common interpretation of collective support
from the national government particularly former President Arroyo

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82 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL
despite the national government’s shortcomings and low trust ratings
in recent history that even limit local autonomous governance. On a
parallel note, the impeachment cases filed at the national level have
also been adopted or mimicked at the local level. The three cases
on recall validate these and have created their own local adoption
of impeachment procedure, as the recall for election becomes an
alternative. This explains the national normative orientation that
shapes local governance.
In the case of capacities, the local actors’ association’s preference
for administrative benefits takes precedence over their own capacity
building. Highlighting their demand for clarifications of their
legislative roles vis-à-vis project development, management reflects
the high level of political and technical understanding required
for their elective position. For decentralization to work, it requires
the existence of democratically functioning local governments to
keep politicians accountable (Agrawal & Ribot, 2000; Ostrom, 2000;
Andersson, 2003; Rodden, 2003 cited in Rodriguez-Pose & Sandall,
2008) including a capacitated workforce.
In this case, three variables stand out, i.e. demand, supply, and
content which have influenced or shaped local institutions. While
the Philippine government invested in local capacity development
43 years ago, way ahead in the region, certain practices have eroded
its usefulness and urgency (Briones, 2008). There are many reasons
why the need for local capacity development is not translated into
demand. Oftentimes, heads of LGUs and policymakers do not
appreciate the relationship between recognized demand for reform
and capacity development. They can be preoccupied with demands
for more education, health and infrastructure but do not see the link
with capacity development.
Further, many elected local officials treat capacity development
as junkets by either sending ill-prepared staff, defeating capacity
development objectives. Second, the ability as supplier of capacity
development is also a big question at whatever levels. It can be
noted that a large number of capacity development institutions
are concentrated in the National Capital Region while the need
and demand for capacity development is obviously greater in the
countryside6. The LGUs are also seeking various providers aside from
the DILG Local Government Academy. Lastly, the content of capacity
development interventions throughout the Philippines is very
uneven. These would range from innovative, cutting-edge tools and
programs to the age-old practice of lectures and recitation, including

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A.B. JAVIER 83
donor-driven methodologies as well. Even as capacity development
institutions are organizing themselves into capacity development
service provider networks, many providers and practitioners are still
out of the loop (Briones, 2008).
On the state’s side, Weiss’ (1998) arguments of capacity exist in a
given context only on issues that are under study; meaning they vary
across areas. For example, while there may be good economic indices
demonstrating good state performance, politically it is not translated
into actions that create increased trust. The performance showing
distintegration into self-serving interest of the national bureaucracy
rather than achieving collective goals is what is influencing the local
governments more; thus failing in its transformative capacity.
In addition, national normative orientations and local capacities
manifest in the understanding of the politics-corporate balance at the
local level. Most politicians complain that citizens pressure them for
personal favors whether legitimate or not because of the nature of
being a public servant. The idea they say presupposes that citizens
might as well get a slice of the pie of government services. Thus,
services outside the bureaucratic mandates became the norm. These
services are reflected in government expenditures as the local pork
barrel, which was regarded as binding and legal.
The patterns developed as a result are the extreme point of view
where the poor ask their benefit from government and the same
question is asked by the middle up to the highest level. In this case,
the bureaucracy which is supposed to provide the corporate balance
for politics is at a status quo. This is because politics is gaining the
upper hand. The politician who is the chief executive controls it.
This validates institutional economics literature, where, institutional
actors such as politicians behave in accordance with what helps
them to advance their political careers, while bureaucrats respond to
rules that provide rewards and punishment in their organizations.
In other words, bureaucrats pursue their own agenda, which does
not necessarily coincide with the interest of the politician. Therefore,
nothing has been done to respond to the needs of the communities
(Pagaran, 2001).
Thus, corporate functioning marked by private financing under
the 1996 local financing framework, even after 12 years, will be hard to
come by on the premise that politics might intervene with financing.
This happens because budget decisions fail to identify real issues as
majority of the LGUs are not doing projections and assessment of
trends and growth rates (Carino, 2008, cited in Llanto et al., 1998),

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84 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL
virtually making the annual investments plan largely discretionary
rather than corporate. There is a regressive trend where richer LGUs
(e.g. Quezon City, Makati, and Manila, among others) maximize their
corporate powers instead of those LGUs that are in need. With this
scenario, government-financing institutions become a monopoly
funder of local development projects. This is why the objective even
of a graduation policy, meaning good performing and creditworthy
LGUs to graduate on IRA, is wishful thinking.

Table 4.

Summary of the Constraints School.

Constraints Should Be Actual Trend

Politics From Above

Normative orientations A decentralized system Decentralization happens


where more power, authority within a centralized
and responsibilities are bureaucracy with LGU
provided (Sec 2a, Ch.1, LGC national support due largely
1991) to hard budget constraints.

Institutional Capacities Optimizes regulation and The general supervision of


to Respond authority and rationale LGUs has largely been on
usage of authority e.g. the a rent seeking approach
President shall exercise emanating from the high
general supervision over distrust rating of the
local government units to President.
ensure that their acts are
within the scope of their
prescribed powers and
functions (Sec. 25, Ch. 3,
LGC 1991)

Politics-Corporate Establish a Government that The pork barrel system or


Balance shall embody the people’s grants from the President’s
ideals and aspirations, Office that are distributed
promote the common good, through political patronage
conserve and develop are regressive and are
patrimony, and provide inconsistent with devolution
security, independence, and (Guevara, 2005). This
democracy under the rule of system has been adopted
law and provide for a regime as a practice at the local
of truth, justice, freedom, government level.

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A.B. JAVIER 85
love, equality, and peace
(Preamble, 1987 Philippines
Constitution)

Politics From Below

Normative Orientations The operative principles Local leadership stemming


of decentralization which from a politicized
includes effective allocation bureaucracy both national
of powers, function and and local is hierarchical.
responsibilities; accountable, Local bureaucracy and
efficient and dynamic legislatures yield in to
organizational structures; national leadership in
just share in revenues; inter- the hope of self-seeking
local cooperation; upgrading windfall.
of local leadership qualities;
participation of all sectors;
and continuing LGU
improvement and quality of
lives of the community (Sec.
3 Ch.1 LGC 1991)

Institutional Capacities The capabilities of LGUs, Capacity building has been


to Respond especially the municipalities a continual prioritization
and barangays, shall be of supra national, national
enhanced by providing and civil movements to
them with opportunities to assist the LGUs. However,
participate actively in the there is a shift in focus from
implementation of national individual to institutional
programs and projects and capacity development
continuing mechanisms where the linkage between
by legislative enabling acts and among capacity
and administrative and development and budget is
organizational reforms (Sec. still a big issue.
3g-h, Ch.1 LGC 1991)

Politics-Corporate Every local government Majority of LGUs depend


Balance unit is a body politic and on the national government.
corporate endowed with The corporate powers have
powers to be exercised by it not been fully optimized.
in conformity with law. As The citizens in general have
such, it shall exercise powers been disengaged with civil
as a political subdivision movements, each institution
of the national government creating their own spaces
and as a corporate entity for local governance.
representing the inhabitants
of its territory (Sec 15, Ch.2,
LGCC 1991)

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86 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL

Conclusion

A focus on conceptual analysis like the constraints school provided the


mode of understanding traditions in shaping local governance. The
workings of any policy, capacity, both individual and institutional
depend on the ways in which all sorts of actors internalize behavior,
policies, and actions. The exposition of the constraints school requires
a shift in the understanding of local governance storyline to introduce
the basics of the new concepts involved in the balance between politics
and corporate as political institutions. This means that the balance of
the political versus the corporate becomes a homogenous concern for
all local governance actors.
The governance approach gives the state a prominent feature
of being a model for local governments where it will be able to
generate the needed structure for the local actors to adapt, solve
their problems, and conduct themselves professionally and display
characteristics associated with good governance. Regrettably, the
nature of institutional improvement adhered to by the Philippines
is biased. It is partial to a best practice managerial model and does
not produce the politics-corporate balance needed from a political
organization such as the local governments. This is due largely to
national and local capacities to govern, consequently alienating them.
Lastly, the reluctance of the national government and its agencies
to surrender their authority in the appellation of decentralization
vis-à-vis LGU performance means local governments have been
re-shaped by national traditions of governance. This complements
Goldratt’s earlier argument that there is one aspect in the institution
that constrains its ability to achieve the goal, which is considered
as its weakest link. This evolution of the constraints school
implicitly establishes the outcomes of the current local governance
in the Philippines as an unintended consequence of the practice of
decentralization through the nine-year experience. Further, this
denotes how Rosenau has defined the government on its activities
backed by formal authorities—these have become the rules of the
game, unfortunately, again.

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A.B. JAVIER 87
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dr. Aser B. Javier is Associate Professor of the Institute of Development Management
and Governance, College of Public Affairs, University of the Philippines Los Banos.
The paper is a result of his Visiting Research Fellowship at the Graduate School of
International Development, Nagoya University, Japan.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The author is grateful to Dr. Hirotsune Kimura of Nagoya University for the
professional comments on an earlier draft and to Ms. Maria Estela Facundo for
editing the work. The author is indebted to the Graduate School of International
Development, Nagoya University, Japan for making the research possible through a
Visiting Research Fellowship grant.

END NOTES
1
The World Bank defines governance as the management of the country’s economic
and social resources for development and it refers to the exercise of political,
economic, and administrative authority to manage a nation’s affairs. The United
Nations defines governance, as the complex mechanisms, process, relationships,
and institutions through which citizens articulate their interest, exercise their rights
and obligations and mediate their differences, respectively.

2
See Javier, Aser B. (2002) where he argued that decentralization in the Philippines
emerged because of global pressures (exogenous) and desire for changes in politics
and management (endogenous).

3
The Social Weather Station (SWS) net satisfaction ratings for President Gloria
Macapagal Arroyo have been consistently low in the last five years.

4
The long lists include the North Rail Project whose costs have lately ballooned
from $503 million to $900 million. Another classic case is the $329-million national
broadband network (NBN) project with China’s ZTE Corp. and various incidents that
implicate national governments.

5
The proposal of the Department of Agriculture is to strengthen the present
Agricultural Training Institute and transform it into the Philippines Agriculture and
Fishery Extension Agency (PAFEA) where the province is the operational core.

6
See Mendoza and Javier 2006. Institutional Mapping of Assistance in Local Financial
Planning and Management in the Philippines. EPRA-Ateneo de Manila University for
detailed capacity development programs.

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88 THE CONSTRAINTS SCHOOL
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SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


Potential Impact of Climate Change on
Marine Mammal Biodiversity of
Southeast Asia:
(A Review)

Ma. Louella L. Dolar


Tropical Marine Research for Conservation
San Diego, California, USA

Edna R. Sabater
Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences, Silliman University,
Dumaguete City, Philippines

Climate change is affecting the oceans, and various studies have


shown potential impacts on marine mammals. Impacts could be
direct via habitat loss; or indirect through changes in the availability
of prey, thus changing distribution and migration patterns and
decreasing reproductive success of marine mammals. Further,
increased water temperature could increase susceptibility to
diseases and enhance impacts of other stressors. Species that
have limited distributions and have little chance of expanding their
range will be most vulnerable.
Although most recent studies have focused on marine mammal
species found in mid to high latitudes because of the relatively
greater potential temperature changes in these areas, impacts on
tropical species are also being recognized. Most vulnerable are
those with limited distributions, particularly the tropical riverine,
estuarine and coastal species. Many of these species are found in
Southeast Asia, a region that houses 32 of the 109-plus species
of marine mammals. Among those with limited distribution that are
already threatened are the Irrawaddy dolphin (Orcaella brevirostris);
finless porpoise (Neophocaena phocaenoides); Indo-Pacific
humpback dolphin (Sousa chinensis); and the dugong (Dugong
dugon). These species have been classified as Vulnerable by the
IUCN in its Red List, except for S. chinensis, which is considered
Near Threatened. Five sub-populations of the Irrawaddy dolphins,
all found in Southeast Asia, are Critically Endangered. Adding to

This paper was presented in the Plenary Session of the International Conference on Biodiversity
and Climate Change. Philippine International Conference Center (PICC), Manila, Philippines,
1-3 February 2011.

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


92 CLIMATE CHANGE AND MARINE MAMMAL BIODIVERSITY
these threats are the high human population growth rates typical
of the coastal areas in Southeast Asia, increased dependence on
the ocean as a source of food as the intensifying El Niño brings
drought into inland areas, and lack of regulation or enforcement of
fishery and conservation laws.

Keywords: climate change, Southeast Asia, marine mammals,


dolphins, cetaceans, dugongs, sea water temperature, Irrawaddy,
finless porpoise, Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin, shifting
geographic range

Introduction

S
cientific evidence has shown that the earth’s climate is changing
(IPCC, 2007a). Land and sea surface temperatures have been
increasing over the last century in a large-scale and consistent
manner. It is believed that at least in the last 50 years, human activities
have contributed largely to the trend through combustion of fossil
fuel (IPCC, 2007a) and this trend is likely to continue (Learmonth et
al., 2006).
Over the 20th century, the global average surface temperature has
increased by 0.6 ± 0.2 oC, with an increase of 0.4-0.7 oC in air temperature
over the oceans and a 0.4-0.8 oC increase in sea-surface temperature
(IPCC, 2001). The increase in global temperature from 1956 to 2005
is nearly twice that of the 100 years from 1906 to 2005 (IPCC, 2007a).
Depending on the climate change model used, it is projected that
globally, land and sea surface temperatures will increase by between
1.1–6.4 oC by 2100, with increases in higher north latitudes being more
pronounced (IPCC, 2007a). It has also been observed that the ocean
has been taking up over 80% of the heat being added to the climate
system, and 69% of that heat is being absorbed in the upper 700 m of
the oceans (IPCC, 2007b).
Climate change can impact the terrestrial and aquatic
ecosystems by first altering their physical and geochemical
characteristics (Learmonth et al. 2006), then impacting their
biological components. Among the physical and geochemical
impacts of climate change on the marine environment are increase in
temperature, decreases in sea-ice cover, rise in sea level, increases in
CO2 concentrations, and changes in salinity, pH, oxygen solubility,
rainfall patterns, storm frequency and intensity, wind speed, wave

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


M.L.L. DOLAR AND E.R. SABATER 93
conditions and climate patterns (IPCC, 2007a).
These alterations in the physical and biochemical characteristics
can, in turn, influence the biological components of the ecosystem,
affecting the distribution and abundances of plants and animals,
community structure, prey availability and abundance, composition
and abundance of competitors and predators, habitat use, timing and
range of migration, vulnerability to diseases and pollutants, timing
of breeding, reproductive success and survival (Tynan & De Master,
1997; Würsig, 2002; Booth & Zeller, 2005; Learmonth et al., 2006).
Climate change can also add more strain to species and populations
that are already burdened by other anthropogenic pressures such
as overharvesting, pollution, fragmentation and habitat destruction
(Salvadeo et al. 2010). Such pressures could lead to local extirpations
or even species extinctions and undermine the resilience of ecosystems
to adapt to other changes.
Ecosystems and species have been affected by climate change in
the past. For example during the Pleistocene (in the last 1.8 million
years) temperature and precipitation also fluctuated, but in a much
slower rate compared to this century, giving the global biota a chance
to cope through evolutionary changes by employing natural adaptive
strategies (IPCC, 2002). Past changes took place in a landscape where
ecosystems were not severely stressed, habitats not alarmingly
fragmented, and with the plant and animal populations not receiving
added pressures from human activities as they do today. Habitat
fragmentation has isolated many populations and most likely
decreased genetic variability, affecting their ability to cope through
natural evolutionary means (IPCC, 2002).
Whereas impacts of climate change are easily measured
and predicted in some marine organisms (e.g. coral reefs, plankton,
shellfish, fish), their likely effects on large animals and those that are
found at the top of the food chain are not immediately evident (Moore
2009). Several recent reviews have dealt with potential effects of
climate change on marine mammals (e.g. MacLeod et al., 2005; Booth
& Zeller 2005; Simmonds and Isaac, 2007; Elliot & Simmonds, 2007;
Learmonth et al., 2006; MacLeod, 2009; Alter, Simmonds, & Brandon,
2010; Gambaiani et al., 2009; Moore, 2009; Salvadeo et al., 2010). Many
of these reviews deal with the effects on species found in mid and high
latitudes where impacts can be more profound. Only a few authors
have considered implications of climate change for marine mammal
species in the tropics. This review will focus on potential effects of

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94 CLIMATE CHANGE AND MARINE MAMMAL BIODIVERSITY
climate change on marine mammals as a whole but particularly on
potential impacts on marine mammals in Southeast Asia.

Marine Mammal Distribution

The term marine mammals includes three higher taxa of mammals


that are not phylogenetically related, the Cetacea (dolphins, whales
and porpoises) in the Order Cetartiodactyla, the Order Sirenia (sea
cows, manatees and dugongs) and members of the Order Carnivora
(seals, sea lions, sea otters, walruses and polar bears). Although
lacking in phylogenetic links, these mammals are often thought of as
a group because they all rely in the aquatic, though not necessarily
marine environment, in all, or part of their existence, and have
evolved similar anatomical and physiological adaptations to aquatic
life (Jefferson, Hung, & Würsing, 2008).
Although some marine mammal species like the killer whale,
(Orcinus orca), and the humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae)
occur throughout the world’s oceans, the distribution of most species
is influenced by physical, chemical, and biological characteristics of
the environment (Forcada, 2009). Water temperature, water depth
and the availability of prey (influenced in turn by bottom topography,
salinity, ocean currents and primary productivity) tend to determine
the ecological distribution of many marine mammals (Forcada, 2009;
MacLeod, 2009).
In general, water temperature appears to be the main factor that
influences the geographic ranges of most marine mammals, with the
other factors primarily influencing the fine-scale distribution of the
species within that geographic range (MacLeod, 2009; Learmonth
et al., 2006). Latitudinal zones, i.e. tropical, sub-tropical, temperate,
Antarctic or Arctic define the distribution of many marine mammals
(Forcada, 2009). Some species are exclusive to a particular zone.
For example the bowhead whale (Balaena mysticetus), the beluga
(Delphinapterus leucas), the narwhal (Monodon monocerus) and the polar
bear (Ursus maritimus), are restricted to the icy waters of the Arctic
(Forcada, 2009). Others, like the long-finned pilot whale (Globicephala
melas) and the Atlantic white-beaked dolphin (Lagenorhynchus
albirostris) are temperate species with thermal limits in either
directions, and some, like Fraser’s dolphin (Lagenodelphis hosei), and
spinner dolphin (Stenella longirostris) are restricted to only tropical
waters (Forcada, 2009; MacLeod, 2009; Learmonth et al., 2006). Some
species move between these latitudinal zones. For example the grey

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M.L.L. DOLAR AND E.R. SABATER 95
whale (Eschrichtius robustus) and humpback whale undergo long-
distance seasonal migrations between warm-water tropical calving
grounds in winter and high-latitude cold-water feeding grounds in
summer.
MacLeod (2009) proposed three hypothesis to help explain the
linkage between water temperature and the geographic ranges of
marine mammals: [1] various species have thermal limits, although
this would seem unlikely given the well insulated large bodies of
marine mammals and their ability to thermo-regulate, [2] temperature
affects the distribution of the marine mammals’ preferred food and
therefore indirectly also affects their distribution (Simmonds & Isaac
2007) and [3] water temperature determines the results of competitive
interactions between species of similar ecological requirements
(MacLeod et al., 2008). More research is recommended to ascertain
which of these hypotheses is most likely to explain the linkage.

Impacts of the Changing Climate on Marine Mammals–Global


Scenario

Predicting the impacts of climate change on marine mammals is


difficult. Firstly because predicting future changes in global climate,
which will be the result of various interactions between its components
(i.e. atmosphere, ocean, land surface, ice areas and the biosphere), is
a challenging task and secondly because very little is known about
the specific habitat preferences of marine mammals and their abilities
to adapt to rapid changes in their environment (Elliot & Simmonds
2007, Learmonth et al. 2006). To complicate matters, climate change is
also predicted to modify human behavior and activities. For example
decreased ice cover in the Arctic may increase shipping activities, oil
and gas explorations and fishing, adding more pressure to the already
stressed Arctic species (Alter et al., 2010).

Direct Effects

The impacts of climate change on marine mammals are expected


to be varied in different areas. Some impacts may be direct, such
as [1] increased water temperatures resulting in shifts in species’
geographic range (MacLeod et al., 2005; Learmonth et al., 2006; Elliot
& Simmonds, 2007; MacLeod, 2009) and, [2] reduced sea-ice and rising
sea level affecting polar seals’ haul-out sites (Learmonth et al., 2006).
It is expected that as the sea surface warms, the tropical zones

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96 CLIMATE CHANGE AND MARINE MAMMAL BIODIVERSITY
will expand into higher latitudes, the temperate zones will shift
toward the poles and the polar zones will contract (MacLeod, 2009).
Alongside this change it is expected that mobile organisms will react
by also shifting their distribution in order to remain within their
preferred ‘environmental envelope’ (MacLeod, 2009; Simmonds &
Elliot, 2009). This shift has already been observed in the white beaked
dolphin in Scotland (MacLeod et al., 2005), northern bottlenose whale
(Hyperoodon ampullatus) in the Bay of Biscay (MacLeod, 2009) and
the Pacific white-sided dolphin (Lagenorhynchus obliquidens) in the
northeastern Pacific (Salvadeo et al., 2010).
Shifting geographic ranges, however, may be limited by the
presence of barriers such as land masses. For example, the land mass
of Asia may prevent the northward movement of some cetacean
species in the Indian Ocean as the water warms. Another example is
the endangered vaquita (Phocaena sinus) whose distribution is limited
only to the northern Gulf of California. The ‘closed embayment’ of its
habitat would prevent it from moving northwards to cooler waters if
water temperature increases and prey availability changes (Simmonds
& Elliot, 2009). In the same manner, bathymetric discontinuities can
limit cetaceans from moving into their preferred habitat (MacLeod,
2009). The opposite may be true for other species. Because of changes in
water temperature, barriers that have prevented them from colonizing
other habitats in the past may be weakened or even may disappear,
“releasing” them to have access to new resources. In the framework
developed by MacLeod (2009) that incorporated ‘barriers’, ‘releasers’,
temperature ranges, water depth preferences, climatic category and
conservation status due to changes in species’ range, he predicted that
the geographic range of 88% of all cetacean species may be affected by
changes in water temperature brought about by climate change. Of
these, 47% of cetacean species are “anticipated to have unfavorable
implications for their conservation” and for the 21%, the changes may
“put at least one geographically isolated population of the species at
risk of extinction”.
The shift will have more serious implications for the distribution
and survival of polar species such as the beluga, the bowhead whale,
narwhal and polar bear, as there will be a limited amount of colder
areas to move into (Elliot & Simmonds, 2007). Because climate change
in the polar zones will be “among the most rapid of any regions on
earth” (IPCC, 2007a), these species will have less time to cope with
and accommodate to changes in their shrinking habitat. In the Arctic,
sea ice cover during summer has been decreasing at a rate of about

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M.L.L. DOLAR AND E.R. SABATER 97
9% per decade (IPCC, 2007a). Decrease in sea ice cover will directly
affect species that rely on ice for breeding (e.g. ice seals) and those
that require solid ground on which to hunt or haul out to rear their
young (e.g. polar bears, walruses) (Moore, 2009; Learmonth et al.,
2006). Most vulnerable are the pinniped species in inlands seas and
lakes such as the Caspian Seal (Pusa caspica) and the Baikal seal (Pusa
Siberia), (Learmonth et al., 2006). These animals are limited in their
ability to track decreasing ice cover (Harwood, 2001).
Whereas geographic ranges of temperate and polar species are
expected to decrease in total area, tropical species’ range is expected
to expand. As water in higher latitudes warms up, tropical species can
move into new environments and colonize new habitats. With a few
exceptions, these species will probably be the least affected negatively
(MacLeod, 2009) in this direct way.

Indirect Effects

Climate change will have indirect impacts on marine mammals,


such as [1] changes in the distribution and density of prey species,
[2] changes in reproductive success and survival, [3] changes in
migration patterns, [4] changes in community structure, and [5]
increased susceptibility to diseases and pollutants.
Shifts in the geographic range of species could be an indirect
effect of climate change. Like all organisms, marine mammal
distribution is highly influenced by the availability of prey, and prey
distribution is intricately linked to oceanographic conditions like
water currents, upwelling, eddies and primary productivity, all of
which can be affected by water temperature. Variation in plankton
composition, distribution, and abundance as a result of regional
changes in sea surface temperatures has been documented in many
areas (Beaugrand & Reid 2003 in Learmonth et al., 2006; Gambaiani et
al. 2009). Baleen whales feed mostly on large patches of plankton and
therefore their distribution can be influenced by the same factors that
influence plankton distribution. Toothed whales feed mainly on fish,
squid and crustaceans. The distributions of these preys are influenced
by oceanographic variables including temperature (Sims et al., 2001;
Sissener & Bjørndal, 2005). The change in the distribution of the
near shore population of the common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops
truncatus) in southern to central California has been indirectly linked
to increases in temperature through the effects on prey during the El
Niño year in 1982-83 (Wells & Scott, 2007).

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98 CLIMATE CHANGE AND MARINE MAMMAL BIODIVERSITY
Reproductive success and calf survival are also tied to prey
abundance. For example, there appears to be a close relationship
between food abundance, body fat and fecundity (Lockyer, 1986).
Female fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus) may produce a calf in two
consecutive years if food is abundant but only one in three years if
prey supply is poor. Prey availability and reproductive success has
also been found related in sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus),
humpback whales, pinnipeds and sirenians (Whitehead, 1997; Boyd,
Lockyer, & Marsh, 1999; Learmonth et al., 2006).
Generally the reproductive cycle and migration patterns of whales
are timed to coincide with maximum prey abundance in their feeding
grounds in higher latitudes. This timing is important for the lactating
mother and the calf being weaned. Observations gathered in the last
40 years on the migration pattern of grey whales show delay of one
week (from January 8 to Jan 15) in migration timing in response to the
El Niño event that occurred in 1998/1999 (Moore 2009).
Another indirect effect of climate change on marine mammals
is change in their community structure. The expansion of the
geographic range of some species in response to the warming of
water temperatures would lead to changes in the species composition
and abundance of marine mammals, as observed in the cetacean
community in northwest Scotland, where abundance of cold water
white-beaked dolphins declined, and abundance of short-beaked
common dolphins, a warm-water species, has increased (MacLeod et
al., 2008). Effects of changes in community structure have implications
for competition and survival of member species (MacLeod, 2009).
Mixing of populations and species not previously associated with
each other could also lead to introduction of novel pathogens and
parasites into the ‘naïve’ population (MacLeod, 2009). The situation
will be exacerbated by increased water temperature that could increase
infection rates and growth of pathogens. Increased temperature can
also increase susceptibility of marine mammals to pollutants that
could further complicate the situation (Learmonth et al., 2006). For
example Booth and Zeller (2005) predicted that increasing water
temperature due to climate change will increase methylation rate of
mercury in the water and therefore increase concentrations of methyl
mercury in the food web. Top predators, like marine mammals, are
more likely to accumulate this pollutant into their system.
Lastly, climate change is bound to modify human behavior, which
indirectly can affect marine mammal distribution and even survival
(Alter et al., 2010). For example, decrease in ice cover in the polar region

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M.L.L. DOLAR AND E.R. SABATER 99

will increase shipping, oil and gas exploration and fishing activities,
which in turn can increase ship strikes, acoustic disturbance, by-
catch and prey depletion. In the tropics, climate change may result in
increased pressure to the marine environment as droughts in inland
areas intensify as a result of climate variability - one of the impacts of
climate change.
While most of the concern about the effects of climate change is
focused on the temperate and polar areas, very little attention has been
given to species found in tropical waters, which are considered by
many to be at a lesser risk from the impacts of climate change. Alter et
al. (2010), on the other hand, consider that many tropical species are
vulnerable, especially to human-mediated actions induced by climate
change. Marine mammal species and populations that are restricted
to coastal, estuarine and riverine habitats are particularly at risk.
Many of these populations are found in Southeast Asia.

Climate Change and the Marine Mammals of Southeast Asia

Southeast Asia is a sub-region of Asia, comprised of two geographic


regions: the mainland and the island arcs and archipelagos. The
mainland section consists of Burma (Myanmar), Cambodia, Laos,
Vietnam, Thailand and Peninsular Malaysia, while the island arc
section consists of Brunei, East Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, the
Philippines, and East Timor (Timor Leste).
Occupying only approximately 3% of the earth’s surface, Southeast
Asia is home to 20% of all known species of plants and animals1. The
mountains, jungles and seas of the countries found in it “form one of
the biggest biodiversity pools in the world”2. Southeast Asia has the
most extensive coastline in the world, the most diverse coral reefs and
the richest marine biodiversity. And it is also the most ecologically
threatened region of the world.
At least 32 species and one subspecies of marine mammals
belonging to seven families have been reported to occur in Southeast
Asian waters (Table 1). Twenty-seven percent of these have strictly
tropical distribution, 46% extend their distribution to warm-temperate
waters and 27% have a worldwide distribution. Impacts of climate
change to the species found in the region are shown in Table 1, taken
from the assessments of MacLeod (2009), Learmonth et al. (2006) and
Alter et al. (2010).
Following MacLeod’s (2009) framework, tropical species are
expected to expand their distributional ranges as the seas warm

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100 CLIMATE CHANGE AND MARINE MAMMAL BIODIVERSITY

up due to climate change, giving them the ability to colonize new


areas. This scenario offers favorable implications to the conservation
status of the species found in the Southeast Asian region, wherein
most of the effects will be expansion of distributional ranges (Table
1). Assessments made by Learmonth et al. (2006), also based on water
temperature increases in latitudinal zones, on the other hand, show
that distributional ranges of 14 species (42%) of cetaceans found in
Southeast Asia would expand and one (3%), the Irrawaddy dolphin,
would have a decreasing range. The fate of 55% of the species
cannot be predicted. Both of these assessments, however, did not
include other climate change impacts (i.e. droughts and changes in
precipitation, rise in sea level, and storm frequency and severity)
that could potentially affect the abundance, distribution and even
survival of tropical marine mammal species. Most importantly they
did not include in their assessments impacts resulting from changes
in human behavior in response to climate change that could greatly
impact marine mammal conservation in tropical climates. These
factors are particularly important in predicting impacts on species
with restricted distributions and those that inhabit coastal, estuarine
and/or riverine areas (Alter et al, 2010).
Six species and one subspecies of marine mammals that are found
in Southeast Asia have coastal distributions. These include Omura’s
whale (Balaenoptera omurai), Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops
aduncus), Indo-Pacific hump-backed dolphin; finless porpoise,
Irrawaddy dolphin, a subspecies of the spinner dolphin, the dwarf
spinner dolphin (Stenella longirostris roseiventris) and the dugong.
Of these, three species (Irrawaddy dolphin, Indo-Pacific humpback
dolphin and finless porpoise) are considered most vulnerable
not only because they inhabit very shallow coastal, estuarine and
sometimes riverine environments but also because they have very
restricted geographical ranges, most of which are centered in areas
that are densely populated by humans. These species are already
under great extirpation pressures (considered Vulnerable-IUCN Red
List, except for Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin which is considered
Near Threatened), with some sub-populations declared as Critically
Endangered (Reeves et al., 2008a; Reeves et al., 2008b; Reeves et al.,
2008c; Reeves & Martin 2007).

Irrawaddy dolphin

Irrawaddy dolphins have a discontinuous distribution in the Indo-

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M.L.L. DOLAR AND E.R. SABATER 101
Pacific region, with almost all populations exclusively tied to estuarine
and freshwater systems (Stacey & Arnold, 1999). Distribution ranges
from Borneo and the central islands of the Indonesian archipelago
north to Palawan and the Visayas in the Philippines and west to the
Bay of Bengal, including the Gulf of Thailand (Reeves et al., 2008c;
Dolar et al., 2009). Freshwater populations occur in three large rivers:
Ayeyarwaddy in Myanmar, Mahakam in Indonesia, and Mekong in
Vietnam, Cambodia and Lao PDR, and two brackish water lakes in
India and Thailand. Twenty-seven of the 32 locations (85%) where
Irrawaddy dolphins have been recorded to occur are found in
Southeast Asia (Kreb, 2004; Smith, 2009).
Many of the Irrawaddy dolphin sub-populations are at the brink
of extirpation. For example IUCN has declared five sub-populations
to be Critically Endangered: the Ayeyarwaddy River sub-population
in Myanmar where there are only 58-72 individuals (Smith, Mya, &
Tint, 2007), the Mahakam River subpopulation in Indonesia with 70
individuals (Krëb, Budiono, & Syachraini, 2007), Malampaya Sound
with 77 animals (Smith et al., 2004), Mekong River with at least 125
individuals (Beasley et al. 2007), and Songkhla Lake, where it is
estimated that probably fewer than 50 adult individuals exist (Smith &
Beasley, 2004). The newly discovered Irrawaddy dolphin population
in Guimaras and Iloilo Straits (Visayas, Philippines) with less than
40 individuals may also be critically endangered as well (Dolar et al.,
2011).

Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin

Though currently considered a single species with two variable types,


some biologists believe that the two types are distinct species: Sousa
chinensis and S. plumbea (Reeves et al., 2008b). The distribution of the
plumbea form includes the western Indian Ocean, from South Africa to
at least the east coast of India. The chinensis-form ranges from the east
and west coasts of northern Australia and from southern China in the
east throughout the Indo-Malay Archipelago and westward around
the Bay of Bengal (Reeves et al., 2008b). Recent phylogenetic studies,
however, indicate that the humpback dolphins from Australia are
significantly different and may represent a different species (Frere et
al., 2008). The separation of the Australian group implies that most of
the range of the chinensis form is within the Southeast Asian region.
The population of this form is declining, with most of the estimates
being in the low hundreds, except for the Pearl River Estuary in

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102 CLIMATE CHANGE AND MARINE MAMMAL BIODIVERSITY
southern China (Reeves et al., 2008a).
Like the Irrawaddy dolphin, the humpback dolphin is a coastal
obligate occurring on open coasts and in bays, lagoons, around rocky
and/or coral reefs, mangrove swamps, and estuarine areas, preferring
shelf waters less than 20 meters deep (Ross et al., 1994; Parra & Ross,
2007; Reeves et al., 2008b). The dolphins sometimes enter a few
kilometers into rivers but remain within tidal range.

Indo-Pacific finless porpoise

Two species of finless porpoise are currently recognized: the Indo-


Pacific finless porpoise (N. phocaenoides), which ranges from the Indian
Ocean to the South China Sea and the East Asian or narrow-ridged
finless porpoise (N. asiaeorientalis) (Wang et al., 2008). The distribution
of the Indo-Pacific finless porpoise includes the northern rim of the
Indian and western Pacific oceans from the Persian Gulf in the west
to the Indo-Malay region in the east to Indonesia. Finless porpoises
prefer shallow waters (<50m in depth) in mangrove zones of tropical
waters. They also inhabit the estuaries and lower reaches of large
river systems such as the Ganges and the Indus rivers. Populations of
both species are declining (Reeves et al., 2008a).

Vulnerability of the tropical coastal marine mammal species to


impacts of climate change

The affinity of coastal cetaceans to estuaries and freshwater sources


has serious implications concerning the impact of climate change
on these species (Fig. 1). Severe weather changes, the strengthening
of El Niño and decreased precipitation could bring droughts into
the region (IPCC, 2007a). This, coupled with an increasing trend of
deforestation could diminish freshwater input into the estuaries. For
cetacean populations living in rivers, that means decrease in their
habitat size, and for those adapted to the estuarine environment, it
means alteration in the salinity of their habitat. Further, sea level is
predicted to rise as a consequence of melting ice in the Polar Regions
and of thermal expansion (IPCC, 2007b). This will bring more seawater
into estuaries and most likely, salt water will also encroach into river
systems, exacerbating the effects of decreased freshwater inputs (Fig.
1). Sea level is predicted to rise about 0.5 m by the end of the century
(IPCC, 2007b). The combined effect would be an increased salinity
in estuarine areas and saltwater intrusion into rivers, resulting in a

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M.L.L. DOLAR AND E.R. SABATER 103

Figure 1. A model showing potential effects of climate change on tropical, coastal, estuarine and
riverine species of marine mammals.

shrinking habitat for species that have become adapted to estuarine


or riverine existence.
Although there is little information on the abilities of estuarine
cetaceans to adapt to increasing salinities, it is speculated that
these changes could affect their survival, either directly through
physiological limitations to cope with high salinity, or indirectly
through decreasing prey/food abundance. Estuaries are especially
productive ecosystems with unique assemblage of organisms
including fish and crustaceans that have developed adaptations to the
brackish water environment. Decreased river flow means decreased
nutrient inputs from land which can affect the overall productivity
of estuaries. Mangroves which contribute greatly to the productivity
in estuarine and coastal areas are also greatly vulnerable to climate-
change-induced sea level rise (IPCC, 2001). Already, mangroves are
under great anthropogenic pressures. They have been disappearing
at an alarming rate. For example, 75% of mangrove forests in the
Philippines have been lost in the last 70 years, and in Indonesia, an
estimated 44,000km2 of mangroves have been destroyed in the past

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104 CLIMATE CHANGE AND MARINE MAMMAL BIODIVERSITY
35 years (IPCC, 2001).
Affinity of coastal species with shallow shelf waters may
mean that they will be vulnerable indirectly to changes in water
temperature. Shallow waters heat up faster than deep waters. Rise
in environmental temperature increases the animal’s metabolic rate
and correspondingly increases demand for food. Meanwhile, general
fishery productivity in tropical waters is expected to decline by about
40% as a consequence of warming seas (Cheung et al., 2009). Dolphins
would then be faced with increasing demand for food but decreased
food availability.
Other coastal marine mammal species found in Southeast
Asia that are not tied to freshwater and estuarine habitats but are
dependent on the productivity of shallow water ecosystems are
the Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin, the dwarf spinner dolphin and
the dugong (Perrin, Dolar, & Robineau, 1999; Wang & Yang, 2009).
Productivity of coral reef systems is predicted to decrease as a result
of impacts of climate change (IPCC, 2002). Warming ocean waters
and ocean acidification observed in the last decades have resulted
in increased coral bleachings and in some cases large-scale coral
mortality (IPCC, 2002). Sea grass beds are also at risk. It is predicted
that increased flooding brought about by intensification of storms
will increase sedimentation rate, which in turn will put many of the
sea grass beds at risk of extirpation, affecting species that rely on
them for food. Dugongs are purely herbivorous, feeding mainly on
seagrasses. Destruction of this habitat will have very serious effects
on the survival of dugong populations in Southeast Asia, where they
are already under tremendous extirpation pressures (Marsh 2009).

Human-mediated threats to tropical species induced by climate


change

Alter et al. (2010) evaluated likely impacts on cetaceans caused by


changes in human behavior and activities resulting from increasing
temperatures, flooding, storm surges, aridity and decreasing ice cover
and new focus on renewable energy. Their results suggest that not
only are the species in polar areas at risk but also the tropical species,
especially those with coastal estuarine and riverine habitats and with
restricted distributions. For the species found in Southeast Asia, six
(18%) have impact scores of 8, the second highest score, which implies
high vulnerability, similar to that for belugas in the polar region
(highest score of 11 was given to gray whales). The six species with

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M.L.L. DOLAR AND E.R. SABATER 105
impact scores of 8 are the Irrawaddy dolphin, Indo-Pacific humpback
dolphin, finless porpoise (the two species combined), Indo-Pacific
bottlenose dolphin, common bottlenose dolphin, and short-beaked
common dolphin (Delphinus delphis). The humpback whale scored 7.
Six (18%) have scores between 1 and 3, and 12 species (36%), most of
which are pelagic and/or deep water species, do not appear likely to
be affected at all (Table 1). Although there are no impact scores for the
remaining three species and one subspecies, it is most likely that the
dugong, because of its dependence on shallow waters and complete
dependence on seagrasses for food, would have an impact score of
8 or greater. Factors that they predicted would have the greatest
impacts on tropical species are drought, increase in storm severity,
sea level rise, coral reef decline and possible increase in use of marine
renewable energy.
Coastal species are particularly vulnerable because their habitats
overlap with areas heavily used by humans. This is particularly
significant in Southeast Asia where total human population is over
594 million, with a density of 750 people / km2. This density is almost
10 times higher than the global average. The archipelagic nature of the
region brings most of the human population near the coast, i.e. 65% of
major cities with population of 2.5 million or more are located along
the coasts (Hinrichsen, 1990). In addition, people in these islands are
maritime in nature, using the seas extensively as a source of food and
for travel between islands.
Droughts inland are expected to drive people to migrate to
near the coast and increase reliance on marine ecosystems (Fig. 1).
This will add pressure to the already overburdened fisheries in the
area (Alter et al., 2010). Fishery effort is expected to increase while
overall productivity of the oceans decreases in response to increasing
sea water temperature. A recent study predicted that while climate
change could increase fishery catch potential in the mid and high
latitudes by 30-70%, there will be a decline of 40% in the tropics
(Cheung et al., 2009). Increased fishing effort could result in increased
marine mammal by-catch while depleting prey (Fig. 1). There is also
a possibility that directed fisheries for marine mammals will increase,
especially in areas where cetaceans are not protected or where there
are few resources to enforce regulatory measures. The greatest threats
that marine mammals face in Southeast Asia today are by-catch, and
in some areas, directed catch (Perrin et al., 2005). It is expected that
these threats will increase as fish yields decline. Increased human
migration to the coast will also increase pollution. This, aided by

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106 CLIMATE CHANGE AND MARINE MAMMAL BIODIVERSITY

increasing temperature will help promote algal blooms (Alter et al.,


2010). Toxins released from algal blooms have caused mass dolphin
mortality in several areas in the past (Gambaiani et al., 2009).
Because of declining precipitation and diminished freshwater
flows, it is expected that more dams will be constructed to irrigate
agricultural lands. Dams will fragment riverine dolphin populations.
Strong storm surges, flooding and sea level rise will drive
people to construct protective structures such as seawalls, dikes,
levees, floodwalls, breakwaters, flood gates, tidal barriers, beach
replenishment and dune restoration and creation (Alter et al., 2010).
The threat of flooding is predicted highest for South and Southeast
Asia, Africa, southern Mediterranean coasts, the Caribbean and most
islands in the Indian and Pacific Oceans (Nicholls, Hoozemans, &
Marchand, 1999). Coastal construction will affect marine mammals
through noise pollution produced by activities such as dredging and
pile driving, habitat loss and degradation (Jefferson et al., 2008).
In summary, while the impacts of global warming have been
predicted to be greatest for arctic and temperate marine mammal
species, it is clear that impacts on tropical marine mammals will likely
also be substantial and may lead to extirpation of some populations.

Acknowledgement

Help given by W.F.Perrin in reviewing and editing the manuscript is gratefully


acknowledged.

Endnotes
1
ASEAN Center for Biodiversity. http://www.aseanbiodiversity.org/index.php?
option=com_content&view=article&id=79&Itemid=98

2
ASEAN Center for Biodiversity. http://www.aseanbiodiversity.org/index.php?
option=com_content&view=article&id=79&Itemid=98

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M.L.L. DOLAR AND E.R. SABATER 107
Table 1.

Predicted impacts of climate change on marine mammal species in Southeast Asia.


(Habitat: C = coastal, P = pelagic / Distribution: W = worldwide, WTE = warm
temperate, CTE = cold temperate, TE = temperate, TR = tropical, STR = subtropical
/ IUCN Conservation Status: CR = critically endangered, EN = Endangered, VU =
Vulnerable, NT = Near Threatened, DD = Data Deficient; LC = Least Concern / CC
(Climate Change) Impacts: ML (MacLeod 2009): un = unchanged, f = favorable; L
= Learmonth et al. 2006: ↑ = range increase, ↓ = range decrease, ? = not known;
Alter et al. 2010, numbers represent impact scores. High score means more impact.

Species Habitat Distribution IUCN CC Impacts


ML L Alter

CETACEA (Whales, Dolphins and Porpoises)



MYSTICETI / Baleen Whales

Family Balaenopteridae—Rorquals
Balaenoptera musculus (Blue whale) P W EN un ? 3
Balaenoptera physalus (Fin whale) P W EN un ? 3
Balaenoptera edeni (Bryde’s whale) P WTE,TR DD f ? 1
Balaenoptera omurai (Omura’s whale) C TR DD no info ? no info
Balaenoptera acutorostrata
(Minke whale) W VU un ? 3
Balaenoptera borealis (Sei whale) P CTE,TR EN no info ? 2
Megaptera novaeangliae
(Humpback whale) P W LC un ? 7

ODONTOCETI / Toothed Whales

Family Delphinidae—Ocean Dolphins


Delphinus capensis (Long-beaked
common dolphin) O STR DD f ↑ no info
Delphinus delphis (Common dolphin) O TE,TR LC f ↑ 8
Feresa attenuata (Pygmy killer whale) O TR,WTE DD f ↑ 0
Globicephala macrorhychus
(Short-finned pilot whale) O TR,STR DD f ↑ 0
Grampus griseus (Risso’s dolphin) O CTE,TR LC f ? 1
Lagenodelphis hosei (Fraser’s dolphin) O WTE,TR LC f ↑ 0
Orcaella brevirostris
(Irrawaddy dolphin) C,R,E TR VU, CR f ↓ 8
Orcinus orca (Killer whale) O W DD un ? 2
Peponocephala electra
(Melon-headed whale) O TR LC f ↑ 0
Pseudorca crassidens
(False killer whale) O WTE,TR DD f ↑ 0
Sousa chinensis (Indo-Pacific
humpback dolphin) C TR NT f ? 8

Continued on the next page...

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108 CLIMATE CHANGE AND MARINE MAMMAL BIODIVERSITY
Table 1. (Continued...)
Predicted impacts of climate change on marine mammal species in Southeast Asia.

Species Habitat Distribution IUCN CC Impacts


ML L Alter

Stenella attenuata (Pantropical


spotted dolphin) O W LC f ↑ 0
Stenella coeruleoalba (Striped dolphin) O CTE,TR LC f ↑ 1
Stenella longirostris longirostris
(Gray’s spinner dolphin) O TR DD f ↑ 1
Stenella longirostris roseiventris
(dwarf spinner dolphin) C TR DD no info ↑ no info
Steno bredanensis
(Rough-toothed dolphin) O WTE,TR LC no info ? 0
Tursiops aduncus (Indo-Pacific
bottlenose dolphin) C TR DD no info ? 8
Tursiops truncatus
(Bottlenose dolphin) O W DD f ↑ 8

Family Kogiidae—Pygmy and Dwarf Sperm Whales


Kogia breviceps (Pygmy sperm whale) O WTE,TR DD f ↑ 0
Kogia sima (Dwarf sperm whale) O WTE,TR DD f ↑ 0

Family Physeteridae—Sperm Whale


Physeter macrocephalus (Sperm whale) W VU un ? 3

Family Ziphiidae—Beaked Whales


Ziphius cavirostris
(Cuvier’s beaked whale) O W LC f ? 0
Mesoplodon densirostris
(Blainville’s beaked whale) O WTE,TR DD f ? 0
Indopacetus pacificus
(Longman’s beaked whale) O TR DD f ? 0

Family Phocaenidae
Neophocaena phocaenoides
(Indo-Pacific finless porpoise) C WTE,TR VU f ? 8

SIRENIA (Manatees and Dugongs)

Family Dugongidae—Dugong
Dugong dugon (Dugong) C TR VU no info ? no info

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M.L.L. DOLAR AND E.R. SABATER 109
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VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


Socio-Economic Monitoring of
Fishers’ Conditions in Selected Sites of
Guimaras Affected By the
2006 Oil Spill

Rodelio F. Subade
Evelyn Jugado-Galero
University of the Philippines—Visayas
Miagao, Iloilo

On August 11, 2006, M/T Solar 1 sank off the southern coast of the
province of Guimaras, Philippines carrying with it some 2.2 million
liters of bunker fuel. The oil leaked from the tanker and affected 194
km of coastline in the municipalities of Nueva Valencia, Sibunag,
and San Lorenzo. The concomitant huge environmental impacts
of the oil spill led to the temporary collapse or cessation of fishing
in several villages during the first few months of the environmental
disaster. In monitoring the recovery, restoration, and resiliency
of social and economic systems affected by the oil spill, it was
vital to analyze major economic activities such as fishing. This
study aimed to determine how fishers, after two years, recovered
from the impact of the oil spill that affected Barangays La Paz
and San Roque of Nueva Valencia municipality. A non-affected
site, Brgy. Lawi in Jordan, Guimaras was selected to serve as
a control site. Socio-economic survey was conducted to a total
of 135 fisher-respondents. Key informant interviews and focused
group discussions were also conducted.
Results of the study showed that the oil spill had directly
affected people in Guimaras who engaged in fishing. Results of
the first and second year socio-economic monitoring revealed that
majority of the fishers in Brgys. Lapaz, San Roque and Lawi have
resumed fishing, but fish catch two years after the oil spill did not
improve significantly. Survey data revealed that monthly fishing
income was subsistence in returns and was below the poverty
threshold. In order to improve the socio-economic condition of
fishers in Guimaras, recommendations were provided for national
and local government units.

Keywords: socio-economics, Solar 1 oil spill, Guimaras fishers,


Philippines

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R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO 115
Introduction

O
n 11 August 2006, M/T Solar 1, which was en route from Bataan
to Zamboanga del Sur, sank off the southern coast of the
province of Guimaras carrying with it some 2.2 million liters
of bunker fuel. It went down to an approximate depth of 640 meters at
100 15’31”N and 1220 29’ 13.3” E, about 13.4 km from Unisan island—
the southernmost part of the province of Guimaras (Figure 1). The
oil leaked from the tanker and moved in the northeast direction
affecting 194 km of coastline in the municipalities of Nueva
Valencia, Sibunag, and San Lorenzo. It further moved northward
along the Guimaras Strait affecting several coastal barangays in
Ajuy and Concepcion, Iloilo. The oil directly hit the mangroves
and the seaweed farms. About 0.9 ha of mangroves in Guimaras
and 0.04 ha in Ajuy, Iloilo died as a result of the oil spill. The oil
slick also passed through coastal marine habitats such as coral
reefs, mangroves and sea grasses. Several estimates have placed
the total volume of bunker fuel oil spilled between 500,000 to 1.2
million liters (Subade, 2006).

Figure 1. Guimaras oil spill, Philippines in August 2006. SOURCE: assets.panda.org.

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116 GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS
The concomitant huge environmental impacts of the oil spill led
to the temporary collapse or cessation of fishing in several villages of
Southern Guimaras during the first few months of the environmental
disaster. Either the fishers could hardly catch fish or the fish caught
could no longer be sold in the market due to absent product demand.
Such realities were major disincentives for fishers to go back to their
usual livelihood source.
In monitoring the recovery, restoration and resiliency of biological,
social and economic systems affected by the oil spill, it is vital that major
economic activities like fishing be analyzed and studied. Moreover,
studies on how the major stakeholders (i.e. fishers) recovered from
such economic disturbance should also be undertaken.
This study aimed to determine how fishers, after two years,
recovered from the impact of the oil spill and to determine their recent
major source of livelihood and the nature of their economic recovery,
if any. The study specifically aimed to:

• characterize the fishing activities—in terms of fishing time,


fishing trips and gear used by selected fishers, to provide a
basis for determining how they were able to recover or go
back to their livelihood;
• characterize the non-fishing related activities undertaken by
sampled fishers, in terms of volume and value of output, and
duration of involvement per unit of time;
• determine the fishing-related and non-fishing related activities
undertaken by sampled fishers, and monitor the costs and
revenues associated with such; and
• provide recommendations to improve the condition of fishers.

In order to provide needed and relevant information, this study


was conducted in two succeeding years.

The Need for Socio-Economic Monitoring

Marine oil spill effects can be numerous. It can directly impact fishery
resources thereby affecting livelihood of fishing communities and the
health conditions of people in the affected community and possibly
altering the normal (usual) activities of the residents especially the
fishers. In some cases, assistance provided and damage claims are
sometimes used to lessen the economic and psychological impact.

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R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO 117
Fishing communities are often involved with clean up during fishing
bans or whilst fishing areas are oiled. This can help offset short-term
financial hardship of the affected individuals (ITOPF, 2003).
In assessing the impact on livelihood, socio-economic monitoring
can be a useful tool. Several variables must be considered in assessing
the impacts and/or recovery of the fishers and the fishing community.
Pido et al. (2009) defined socio economic monitoring as a tool for
collecting and analyzing basic socio-economic data useful for coastal
management. Socio-economic monitoring was used to assess the
awareness of people's dependence on marine resources, perceptions
of resource conditions, threats to marine resources, use levels, and
status of governance of two locally-managed marine-protected areas
(MPAs) in Puerto Princesa City, Palawan Province, Philippines.
Also, it has huge potential for between- and across-sites comparison
to better inform management decisions, including communication
with stakeholders, and to form a baseline for current socio-economic
conditions of MPAs and coral reef areas.
Subade (1991) examined the socio-economic profile and fishing
characteristics of Guimaras Strait fishers. The study was able to
analyze the profitability and economic efficiency of such fishers,
who were operating 121 sampled gillnet boats (considered as fishing
firms). He found that many small-scale or municipal fishermen,
to whom the gill net fishermen belong, were living below the
poverty threshold. Average household size was 5.7 and 71% of the
households were dependent on only one income earner in the family.
Sixty one percent of the households were dependent on fishing as
the only source of income. During that period, fishing in Guimaras
Strait was profitable for gillnet fishers which could be due to a
better environmental condition and lesser number of fishers in the
area. The study also found that aside from fishing, there were other
employment alternatives available for the gill net fishers that could
have contributed to a better economic condition at that time.
In the study of Born et al. (2003), fisheries monitoring data was
used to assess the fishing characteristics of Galapagos artisanal
fishery after the oil spill. They found that the impact on the local
Galapagos artisanal fishery during the January 2001 grounding of the
Jessica and subsequent oil spill was relatively minor. No significant
changes in fishing effort, total fishing catches or catch-per-unit effort
were detected after the spill based on analyses of fisheries monitoring
data. Nevertheless, large boats tended to move away from sites near
the path of the spill following the grounding in 2001, with no fishing

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118 GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS

recorded from the oil-affected regions of Floreana and southern


Isabela in February 2001. The total fishing effort of small boats
operating from the Jessica-grounding island of San Cristobal also
declined immediately after the spill, probably in part because such
boats were used in clean up operations. During 2001, prices paid to
fishers remained stable at levels higher than in 2000, with the notable
anomaly that prices fell precipitously to 30% of previous levels during
a 1–2 week period in early February 2001. Fish exports remained at
similar levels for the years 2000 and 2001. However, as in the previous
year, little fish product was exported from Galapagos in the month
following the spill, with most fish product dried and stored for up to
two months prior to transport to the continent.
Furthermore, a socio-economic study was also employed as method
to assess the impact of a disaster other than oil spill. Siwar, Ibrahim,
Harizan and Kamaruddin (2006) highlighted the socioeconomic
impacts of the 26th December 2004 tsunami on fisheries, aquaculture
and livelihood of coastal communities in Malaysia. Data for the
discussion were collected in the months of January to February 2005,
based on a rapid assessment survey of communities impacted by
the tsunami in the states of Kedah (including Langkawi Island) and
Penang. In March 2005, and recently in September 2006, another
rapid follow-up survey was conducted in Kedah to assess recent
progress, development and remaining issues facing the impacted
communities. The socioeconomic analysis focused on accounting the
loss and damages to human lives, properties, fishing equipment, and
aquaculture enterprises. In addition, financial estimates of damage
were provided. Impact on livelihood covered loss of employment,
income and psychological trauma experienced by the affected
populations.
In summary, the study of Subade (1991) provided a good
background on the fishing and socio-economic characteristics of
fishers in Guimaras before the onset of the oil spill. The studies
of Born et al. and Siwar et al., on the other hand, revealed the
importance of socio-economic study and monitoring in determining
the impact (recovery if any) after any event of disaster. Moreover,
it was found that socio economic monitoring is important in
determining diversity of income sources and access to other
livelihood other than fishing. Diversifying income sources of the
households also builds resilience and helps the families to cope
with sudden changes and disasters.

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R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO 119
Methodology

The University of the Philippines Visayas (UPV) Oil Spill Research
Program was tasked to undertake various studies ranging from
biological, chemical, fisheries and socio-economic to determine the
impact of the oil spill on the Guimaras island. UPV chose to focus
its various studies in the affected (and neighboring) barangays of La
Paz and San Roque of Nueva Valencia municipality. The UPV Marine
Biological Station is located in these two barangays. Moreover, in this
particular study, another barangay—Lawi in Jordan, Guimaras—was
selected. It was believed that this barangay was either not affected or
was less affected by the oil spill
The study focused on collecting data and information from
clustered villages/ communities of fishers. The unit of analysis was
the sampled fisher—either the owner-operator or the fisher-operator.
A list of full time fishers was acquired for each of the Sitios based on an
earlier list from the municipal hall, verified with the barangay captain,
head of the barangay fisheries and aquatic resource management
council (BFARMC) and other key informants. From each of the lists,
45 fishers were randomly selected for each barangay.
The first period of monitoring was done in the month of November
2007 while the second period was conducted in May 2008. Two years
after the oil spill or during the second period of data monitoring,
researchers went back to the field (in the same season) and interviewed
the same fisher-respondents. Key informant interviews and focused
group discussions were also conducted to verify other important
indicators.
Socio-economic survey was conducted to a total of 135 fisher-
respondents. The survey consisted of items about their perception
and attitudes after oil spill, fishing characteristics (e.g. fishing gear
used, species caught) and fishing cost structure. Sources of income
other than fishing were also determined. The framework for analysis
(Figure 2) is a simple illustration on the socio-economic monitoring
that focused more on fishing activity, costs and revenues. It is
expected to provide inputs to management strategies or local policy
and programs that will affect fishers’ household/family income.

Results and Discussion

It was first decided that only full time fishers will be interviewed and

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120 GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS
included in this study. However, results of the first year monitoring
revealed that some of these full time fishers were no longer as active
as fishers as before. Some of them did fishing on a part-time basis
depending on season and/or profitability. Nevertheless, it was decided
that these part time fishers would be interviewed for the second year
of monitoring study.
Results of the first year socio-economic monitoring showed some
indicators of recovery among fisher-respondents. Fishers were able
to go back to fishing but their catch decreased after the oil-spill. They
also claimed that their situation worsened a year after oil spill.
During the first year, two periods of data monitoring were
conducted to determine the indicators of recovery and resiliency
among the oil spill affected sites. The first period in the month of
November was believed to be the lean season of fishing while the
second period in the month of May was believed to be the peak season
of fishing. For the purpose of comparison, sampled fishers from
affected sites (Lapaz and San Roque, Nueva Valencia, Guimaras) and
fishers from a less-affected or non-affected site (Brgy Lawi, Jordan,
Guimaras) were interviewed. All fishers interviewed were utilizing
traditional fishing gear like hook and lines, long lines and gill nets.
Characteristics of the fishing gear and boat used revealed that they
were indeed municipal fishers.
It could be observed that the livelihood of fishers affected by oil
spill had somehow returned to normal but whether or not fishing
remained profitable, was a big question. Did fishers eventually shift
to other sources of livelihood? What happened to fishers two years
after the oil spill? This study tried to answer these questions.

Perceptions and Attitudes of the Respondents Two Years After


Oil Spill

During the first year of data monitoring fishers opined that their
present situation was poor because they could hardly catch fish.
Some respondents pointed out that fish catch even before oil spill
was already low. The major reason for such decrease in fish catch
according to them was brought by the increase in population and
thereby an increase in the number of fishers. Two years after the
oil spill, majority (80.99%) of sampled fishers perceived that their
situation had worsened—they were still poor and fish catch per trip
was still very low (Table 1). Only about 5% of the respondents said
that their situation is much better now, two years after the oil spill.

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO 121
Table 1.

Respondents’ perception on their situation after the oil spill.

Response 1 year after the oil spill 2 years after the oil spill

Same/No change 43 (34.4%) 16 (13.22%)


Poor/Become worse 73 (58.4%) 98 (80.99%)
Better 5 (4.0%) 6 (4.95%)
Fine (Ok lang) 1 (0.8%) 0
Surviving (Makakaon pa man) 2 (1.6%) 0
No answer 1 (0.8%) 0
For food consumption only
(Gapangisda pangsud-an
na lang) 0 1 (0.83%)

Total 125 121

When fishers were asked if they still engaged in fishing given


the perception that they can hardly catch fish, 80.16% still continued
fishing while nearly 20% of the respondents either temporarily or
permanently stopped fishing (Table 2).

Table 2.

Fishers’ engagement in fishing.

Response Year 2

Period 1 Period 2

Lapaz San Lawi Total Lapaz San Lawi Total


Roque Roque

Not anymore 11 11 2 24 6 5 9 20
(26.2%) (26.2%) (5.4%) (19.8%) (15.4%) (12.2%) (23%) (16.81%)
Still engaged 31 31 35 97 33 33 30 96
(80.2%) (80.67%)
Rarely 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 3
(2.52%)

Total 42 42 37 121 39 41 39 119

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


122 GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS

The cited reasons for temporarily stopping include poor catch


and health reasons. Fish catch according to some respondents was
sometimes good only for family’s viand. They also perceived that
fishing revenue could not offset fishing costs. Some of them migrated
or transferred residence, while others shifted to other sources of
livelihood. Despite such unfavorable fishing outcomes, still a bigger
percentage of the fisher-respondents continued fishing since fishing
is their main source of income. Others still have plans to go back to
fishing once the (future) catch becomes better.

Number of household members involved in fishing

Table 3 shows that most of the fisher-respondents have at least one


family member involved in fishing. Other ranges were from 2-4
household members. Respondents who indicated one means that
either only one family member or the household head is involved in
fishing.

Table 3.

Number of household members involved in fishing.

No. of Household Year 1 Year2


Members (Average for 2 Periods) Period 1 Period 2

Temporarily stopped
fishing 0 6 (4.95%) 5 (4.20%)
1 62 (49.6%) 50 (41.32%) 53 (44.54%)
2 31 (24.8%) 34 (28.10%) 33 (27.73%)
3 18 (14.4%) 19 (15.70%) 16 (13.45%)
4 10 (8.0%) 6 (4.95%) 7 (5.88%)
5 2 (1.6%) 3 (2.48%) 4 (3.36%)
6 1 (0.8%) 2 (1.65%) 1 (0.84%)
7 1 (0.8%) 0 0

Total 125 121 119


About 25% of the fishers were fishing crew (locally called “boso”)
while close to three-fourths (71.43 %) of fisher-respondents had their

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO 123
own fishing gear (Table 4). Usually a “boso” owns no fishing gears;
either he borrows fishing equipment from the boat or gear owner and
pays usually in the form of share in the fish catch or he assists the
master fisher/boat captain and gets a share afterwards.

Table 4.

Gear Ownership (Do you have your own gear used during fishing?)

Response Year 2

Period 1 Period 2

Lapaz San Lawi Total Lapaz San Lawi Total


Roque Roque

No (Boso) 14 6 11 30 13 7 15 34
(24.79%) (28.57%)
Yes 28 36 26 90 26 34 24 85
(74.38%) (71.43%)

Total 42 42 37 121 39 41 39 119

Fishing Characteristics

Respondents were again asked to categorize themselves as part-


time or full-time fishers. It was assumed that fishers who took at
least five fishing trips per week were considered as full time fishers.
On the other hand, part-time fishers had less than five fishing trips
per week. The two fishing periods in Year 2 of Table 5 show that the
number of full-time fishers had reduced and those who did part-time
fishing increased in number. This confirms fishers’ claim that it was
disincentive for them to go out fishing because of poor catch, thus
making them resort to other sources of livelihood.

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


Table 5.
124

Self-Categorization by fishers according to time spent in fishing activities/ livelihood.

Fisher’s Type Year 1 Year 2

SILLIMAN JOURNAL
Period 1 Period 2

Lapaz San Roque Lawi Lapaz San Roque Lawi Lapaz San Roque Lawi

Part-time 10 (24.4%) 11 (25.6%) 5 (12.2%) 20 (44.4%) 20 (44.4%) 15 (33.3%) 12 (30.8%) 15 (36.6%) 14 (35.9%)

Full-time 30 (73.2%) 32 (74.4%) 36 (87.8%) 22 (48.9%) 22 (48.9%) 22 (48.9%) 27 26 25

No answer 1 (2.4%) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Total 41 43 41 42 42 37 39 41 39

JANUARY TO JUNE 2011


GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS

VOL. 52 NO.1
R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO 125

Fishing Gear Owned and Used by Sampled Fishers

From the distribution of fishing gear owned by a fisher (Table 6), it


should be noted that per barangay, the total number of gear exceeds
the total number of respondents because there were fishers who used/
owned two or more gears. Usage of these gears depends on fishing
trip type, season of fishing, and/or weather condition. As cited by
46.28% of the fisher-respondents, gill net was the commonly-used
fishing gear, particularly in Barangays San Roque and Lawi. In Brgy.
La Paz, hook and line and long line were the most commonly used
gear. Other full-time fishers either did not have fishing gear of their
own or were just full-time fishing crew.

Table 6.

Distribution of Fishing Gear Owned/Used by Sampled Fishers Year 2 Period 1.

Fishing Gear Type Lapaz San Roque Lawi Total

Gill net 6 29 21 56 (46.28%)


Hook and line 9 5 7 21 (17.36%)
Long line 10 4 3 17 (14.05%)
Spear 3 0 0 3 (2.48%)
Punot/screen 2 8 7 17 (14.05%)
Fish corral 0 0 1 1 (0.83%)
Into-into 2 0 0 2 (1.65%)
No fishing gears owned (Boso) 17 6 4 27 (22.31%)

*Total exceeds number of respondents since this is a multiple response question.


Percent over the total number of respondents (n=121)

Fishing Trips and Catch

The number of fishing trips had decreased two years after the oil spill
(Table 7). During this period, the number of fishing trips per week had
decreased from an average of four fishing trips during the first year
to an average of three fishing trips per week in the second year. The
number of fishing trips and fishing hours had declined since fish catch
was perceived to be poor.

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


126 GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS
Respondents were also asked on the number fishing trips per
month. There were two sets of results for Year 2: the perceived and the
derived. The “perceived” was the response of the respondents when
asked on the usual number of trips of fishers per month. However, the
“derived” value of the number of fishing trips was computed using
the given number of fishing trips per day multiplied to the number of
fishing trips per week, then multiplied again to four weeks (1 month)
in order to get the average number of fishing trips. Translating the
“perceived” number of trips monthly, San Roque and Lawi fishers
took 22 fishing trips while Lapaz fishers took 14 fishing trips only.
Comparing the results of Year 1 and Year 2, the number of fishing
trips for Lapaz significantly decreased in Year 2. The respondents
perceived that average number of fishing trips per month was 19 to
20 trips. However, when the figure was derived using their actual
number of trips per day and week, the average number of trips per
month was only 12 trips.
When outliers were included, the average fish catch per trip ranged
from 2.79 kg to 4.35 kg in Year 2, Period 1 (Table 8). An increase in the
average fish catch per trip was observed in Year 2, Period 2, average fish
catch ranged from 2.78 to 7.59 per fishing trip. The Period 2 fishing season
was between months of April and May and was considered as peak season
of fishing. Fish catch was higher in Period 2 compared to the catch during
period 1, thereby confirming that Period 1 (November to December) was
within lean season while Period 2 (May) was within peak months.
As compared to Year 1 results, there was a decrease in the average
fish catch across three fishing communities except for San Roque
which showed an increase in Year 2, Period 1. However, San Roque
fisher-respondents had the lowest average fish catch per trip across
four periods of data monitoring.
The average fish catch when outliers were deleted and those that
did not fish during that season were deleted from the analysis. Table 9
reveals that the average fish catch per trip generally decreased except for
Brgy. San Roque, despite exclusion of non-fishers during this season and
of those fishers whose fish catch went beyond 10kg. There was also no
significant changes in the fish catch during Year 2, Period 2. In Barangay
Lawi, the number of fishers engaged in fishing activity had declined due
to their involvement in fish pens/cage culture in the area, one of which
was funded by the BFAR as oil spill related livelihood project for the
community. This project gained financially during their first harvest, so
other private individuals were also interested and tried to venture in such
activity.

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


Table 7.

Fishing Trips Details.

Variable Y ear 1 (n=125) Year 2 (n=121)

VOL. 52 NO. 1
Period 1 Period 2 Period 1 Period 2

Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi
Roque Roque Roque Roque

Fishing trips per day 1.07 1.12 1.32 0.80 1.28 1.44 0.88 0.90 0.89 0.79 1.01 0.67
(0.64) (0.66) (0.72) (0.55) (0.73) (0.77) (0.57) (0.56) (0.58) (0.55) (0.63) (0.52)

Fishing days per week 4.80 4.60 4.41 3.63 4.77 4.71 3.04 3.64 3.72 3.31 4.28 3.42
(2.67) (2.64) (2.71) (2.70) (2.39) (2.21) (2.25) (2.64) (2.41) (2.76) (2.77) (3.04)
R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO

No. of hours of fishing 6.24 5.69 3.84 5.94 5.44 4.20 4.40 5.34 3.81 7.13 4.94 3.22
(4.94) (4.42) (3.27) (4.86) (3.45) (2.20) (3.68) (0.47) (2.97) (6.65) (3.68) (3.47)

No. of hours to reach


fishing ground 0.93 0.76 0.68 0.76 0.74 0.879 0.61 0.55 (0.72) 2.91 3.10 1.76

JANUARY TO JUNE 2011


(1.58) (0.78) (0.55) (1.02) (0.59) (0.63) (0.64) (0.68) (0.62) (4.77) (4.83) (3.94)

No. of hours setting nets 0.86 0.862 0.44 0.46 0.457 0.53 0.22 0.45 0.45 4.72 5.54 3.76
(2.37) (3.63) (0.75) (0.88) (0.55) (0.78) (0.29) (0.59) (0.59) (7.24) (8.29) (6.50)

No. of hours waiting 1.69 1.35 1.03 2.26 1.621 1.35 1.57 1.69 1.22 5.11 3.92 1.43
(2.32) (2.15) (0.97) (3.58) (2.54) (1.21) (2.68) (2.11) (1.48) (5.77) (5.66) (3.29)

No. of fishing trips


per month(perceived) NA NA NA NA NA NA 17.9 18.9 19.21 14.21 22.48 22.03

No. of fishing trips


per month derived) 20.54 20.61 23.28 11.62 24.42 27.13 10.70 13.10 13.24 10.46 17.29 9.17

Note: figures in parentheses are standard deviation

SILLIMAN JOURNAL
127
Table 8.
128

Average Fish Catch and Catch Disposal (Outliers Included).

Variable Y ear 1 (n=125) Year 2 (n=121)

Period 1 Period 2 Period 1 Period 2



Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi

SILLIMAN JOURNAL
Roque Roque Roque Roque
(41) (43) (41) (41) (43) (41) (42) (42) (37) (39) (41) (39)

Average catch per trip 9.01 3.94 7.01 8.02 7.23 9.12 3.15 4.35 2.79 7.59 2.78 6.54
(12.00) (5.25) (8.49) (17.30) (30.94) (11.96) (3.06) (5.42) (2.66) (12.84) (3.15) (10.89)

Average Kg consumed 0.69 0.75 1.3 0.68 0.775 1.13 0.47 1.01 0.70 0.93 0.74 0.74
(0.87) (0.72) (1.82) (1.80) (2.33) (1.63) (0.44) (1.14) (0.65) (1.51) (0.92) (1.01)

Average Kg given away 0.54 0.14 0.25 0.22 0.04 0.085 0.11 0.10 0.17 0.13 0.00 0.01
(0.95) (0.43) (0.55) (0.64) (0.17) (0.34) (0.30) (0.36) (0.58) (0.52) (0.08)

Average Kg sold 7.80 3.06 5.47 7.12 6.67 7.85 2.57 3.25 1.91 6.7 2.03 5.93
(10.60) (4.65) (6.82) (15.84) (30.97) (11.63) (2.78) (4.64) (2.03) (11.91) (2.97) (10.08)

JANUARY TO JUNE 2011


Note: Figures in parentheses are standard deviation

VOL. 52 NO.1
GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS
Table 9.

Average Fish Catch When Outliers Were Deleted and Those Who “Did Not Fish” Were Removed From the Analysis.

Variable Y ear 1 (n=125) Year 2 (n=121)

VOL. 52 NO. 1
Period 1 Period 2 Period 1 Period 2

Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi
Roque Roque Roque Roque
(n=23) (n=30) (n=24) (n=24) (38) (26) (31) (28) (29) (n=25) (n=30) (n=16)

Average catch per trip 4.72 3.0 3.23 5.26 2.88 3.94 3.90 3.09 3.18 4.83 3.09 2.95
(2.73) (2.25 (2.69) (3.56) (1.97) (2.76) (2.64) (2.33) (2.14) (1.01) (1.95) (3.45)
R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO

Average Kg consumed 0.48 0.79 0.83 0.40 0.55 0.59 0.63 0.98 0.85 1.01 0.96 0.51
(0.63) (0.65) (0.67) (0.89) (0.57) (0.65) (0.41) (0.79) (0.63) (1.71) (0.97) (0.68)

Average Kg given away 0.15 0.09 0.08 0.08 0.05 0 0.15 0 0.18 0.04 0 0
(0.32) (0.21) (0.24) (0.19) (0.17) (0.35) (0.63) 0.20

JANUARY TO JUNE 2011



Average Kg sold 4.09 2.15 2.31 4.69 2.28 0.35 3.14 2.14 2.14 4.04 2.11 2.75
(2.30) (1.75) (1.83) (3.43) (1.85) (2.64) (2.44) (2.05) (1.60) 3.27 (1.91) (2.32)

Note: Average catch greater than 10kg was considered outliers. These were extreme values, which if were included in the analysis, would have resulted
to unbelievably high average values

SILLIMAN JOURNAL
129
130 GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS
Cost Structure and Profitability of Fishing

As mentioned earlier some fishers had stopped fishing as the revenue


from fishing could not even cover operation costs. Only fishers who
were engaged in fishing activity at the time of the study were included
in the analysis of fishing operation cost. Of the 119 respondents, only
71 did engage in fishing. However, some fishers specifically the fishing
crews did not incur any costs because fishing cost was financed either
by the gear or boat owner. Fuel cost during Year 2, Period 1 ranged from
22.50 to 52.07 pesos only or equivalent to 0.5 to 1 liter of fuel. Unlike in
Year 1, the average liters of fuel used per fishing trip was more than 1
liter. The total variable costs (TVC) in Year 1 were estimated to range from
44.80 to 104.14 pesos while the TVC in Year 2 ranged from 48.19 to 138.03
pesos (Table 10). San Roque fishers incurred the lowest variable costs
since many of the fishers used non-motorized banca and did not incur
fuel cost. Regardless of fishers’ type and gear used, fishing cost in Year 2,
Period 1 and Year 2, Period 2 had no significant difference. Fixed costs did
not vary since fishers were using the same fishing gear, boats, and fishing
equipment; hence, depreciation costs for these equipment would be the
same across the two years/periods.

Cost and Returns from Fishing

In summarizing the costs and returns from fishing per trip and per
month, respectively (Tables 11 and 12), total revenue was derived by
multiplying the number of kilograms of fish caught (per fish species)
by its price per kilo. In Year 1, revenue ranged from 250.83 to 767.25
pesos and in Year 2, it ranged between 281.08 to 590.40 pesos per trip.
Fishers from Brgy. San Roque had the lowest revenue from Year 1 to
Year 2 (except in Period 2 of Year 2), and also had the lowest profit.
Fishers from Brgy. La Paz had the highest revenue and profit, due
primarily to bigger catch per trip compared with other sites.
The prevailing sharing system across three barangays was
“mitad” (where expenses are subtracted from the total profit and
what was left was divided by three). Gains from fishing are divided
into three because of this sharing system; two parts of the share is for
the gear owner, one part is divided among fishing crew. The share
of the fishing crew ranged from 45.93 to 203.19 pesos while the share
or profit of the gear owner ranged from 93.26 to 337 pesos per trip.
It is interesting to note that the gains from fishing of the fishing crew
were relatively small, subsistence in returns, and below the minimum

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


Table 10.

Fishing Costs Per Trip.

Variable Y ear 1 Year 2

VOL. 52 NO. 1
Period 1 Period 2 Period 1 Period 2

Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi
Roque Roque Roque (25) Roque (16)
(30)

Fuel 106.00 45.58 80.78 73.48 31.74 60.37 40.58 22.50 52.07 55.48 21.97 35.56
R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO

(96.93) (84.66) (79.67) (103.36) (55.39) (81.49) (79.59) (46.82) (69.13) (74.98) (31.81) (61.85)
Oil 2.92 1.72 2.50 1.60 0.93 1.92 0.35 0.30 0.93 0.84 0.99 0.81
(4.7) (2.69) (3.32) (6.28) (3.45) (3.77) (1.49) (0.83) (1.41) (2.23) (1.96) (1.75)
Ice 2.12 0.93 1.22 3.90 1.05 1.71 0 0 0 0 0 0.19
(4.96) (3.66) (7.81) (12.82) (4.16) (6.38) (0.75)
Bait 79.34 0 1.95 22.68 1.73 16.27 37.02 4.17 3.38 42.40 0 13.13

JANUARY TO JUNE 2011


(112.15) (7.15) (55.69) (8.84) (53.37) (84.59) (16.89) (11.43) (83.27) (37.90)
Miscellaneous (food,
cigar, etc...) 14.51 15.19 11.66 12.02 9.56 10.17 5.79 9.56 14.65 4.76 12.59 11.88
(27.77) (26.79) (20.74) (28.68) (14.48) (20.00) (9.15) (13.45) (19.15) (13.47) (19.18) (21.59)
Gas 25.24 17.69 0 15.80 11.62 6.59 10.62 6.40 0 23.39 3.70 0.31
(49.75) (64.57) (46.83) (58.65) (30.46) (40.85) (23.88) (49.33) (9.77) (1.25)
Gasa 0 0.19 0 0.68 0.42 0.00 0.49 0 0 0.56 0.33 0
(1.22) (3.18) (2.78) (2.55) (2.80) (1.83)
Maintenance (repair) 26.96 11.67 9.43 5.50 11.62 6.59 9.29 1.87 3.33 10.96 8.61 1.88
(57.70) (13.36) (14.96) (10.69) (58.65) (30.46) (26.18) (6.71) (9.71) (25.78) (18.45) (5.12)

Total Variable Costs 257.09 92.97 107.54 135.66 68.67 103.62 104.14 44.8 74.36 138.03 48.19 63.76

SILLIMAN JOURNAL
131

Continued to next page...


Table 10. (Continued...)
132

Fishing Costs Per Trip.

Variable Y ear 1 Year 2

Period 1 Period 2 Period 1 Period 2



Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi

SILLIMAN JOURNAL
Roque Roque Roque (25) Roque (16)
(30)

Styro Box 0.13 0.09 0.05 0.13 0.08 0.14 0.13 0.08 0.14 0.13 0.08 0.14
(0.33) (0.30) (0.22) (0.43) (0.39) (0.31) (0.43) (0.39) (0.31) (0.43) (0.39) (0.31)
Pail 0.07 0.08 0.04 0.01 0.05 0.06 0.01 0.05 0.06 0.01 0.05 0.06
(0.18) (0.20) (0.12) (0.04) (0.14) (0.16) (0.04) (0.14) (0.16) (0.04) (0.14) (0.16)
Basket 0.02 0.09 0.13 0.02 0.50 0.00 0.02 0.50 0.00 0.02 0.50 0.00
(0.07) (0.19) (0.34) (0.10) (3.24) (0.10) (3.24) (0.10) (3.24)
Flashlight 0.18 0.09 0.13 0.02 0.02 0.08 0.02 0.02 0.08 0.02 0.02 0.08
(0.60) (0.31) (0.60) (0.10) (0.08) (0.26) (0.10) (0.08) (0.26) (0.10) (0.08) (0.26)
Petromax 0.45 0.07 0.00 0.91 0.09 0.06 0.91 0.09 0.06 0.91 0.09 0.06
(2.29) (0.48) (5.86) (0.41) (5.86) (0.41) (5.86) (0.41)

JANUARY TO JUNE 2011


Licenses and Permits 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.05 0.04 0.06 0.05 0.04 0.06 0.05 0.04 0.06
(0.34) (0.27) (0.27) (0.34) (0.27) (0.27) (0.34) (0.27) (0.27)
Boats (Dep. Costs)* 12 5.86 16.9 12.37 5.86 16.9 12.37 5.86 16.9 12.37 5.86 16.9
(15.43) (8.31) (15.43) (8.31) (24.89) (15.43) (8.31) (24.89) (15.43) (8.31) (24.89)
Gill nets* 2.35 12.39 14.23 2.35 12.39 14.23 2.35 12.39 14.23 2.35 12.39 14.23
(5.33) (13.86) (5.33) (13.86) (20.91) (5.33) (13.86) (20.91) (5.33) (13.86) (20.91)
TFC (Dep. Costs) 15.2 18.67 31.48 15.86 19.03 31.53 15.86 19.03 31.53 15.86 19.03 31.53

Total Costs 272.29 111.64 139.02 151.52 87.7 135.15 151.52 87.7 135.15 153.89 67.22 95.29

Figures in parentheses are standard deviations

VOL. 52 NO.1
GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS
Table 11.

Cost and Returns of Fishing in Selected Sites of Southern Guimaras (Per Trip).

Variable Y ear 1 Year 2

VOL. 52 NO. 1
Period 1 Period 2 Period 1 Period 2

Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi
Roque Roque Roque Roque

Total variable costs 257.09 92.97 107.54 135.66 68.67 103.62 104.14 44.8 74.36 138.03 48.19 63.76
Total fixed costs 15.2 18.67 31.48 15.86 19.03 31.53 15.86 19.03 31.53 15.86 19.03 31.53
R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO

Total costs 272.29 111.64 139.02 151.52 87.7 135.15 151.52 87.7 135.15 153.89 67.22 95.29
Total revenue 775.27 250.83 408.75 767.25 382.19 535.49 368.62 281.08 384.76 590.40 332.21 312.97
A. Gains after cost
is deducted 502.98 139.19 269.73 615.73 294.49 400.34 217.1 193.38 249.61 436.51 264.99 217.68
B. Share of the gear/
boat owner 337.00 93.26 180.72 412.54 197.31 268.23 145.46 129.56 167.24 292.46 177.54 145.85

JANUARY TO JUNE 2011


C. Share of the fishing
crew (boso) 165.98 45.93 89.01 203.19 97.18 132.11 71.64 63.82 82.37 144.05 87.45 71.83

SILLIMAN JOURNAL
133
Table 12.
134

Cost and Returns From Fishing Per Month.

Variable Y ear 1 Year 2

Period 1 Period 2 Period 1 Period 2


SILLIMAN JOURNAL
Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi Lapaz San Lawi
Roque Roque Roque Roque

Total variable costs 5,141.80 1,859.40 2,150.80 2,713.20 1,373.40 2,072.40 2,082.80 896.00 1,487.20 2,760.60 963.80 1,275.20
Total fixed costs 304.00 373.40 629.60 317.20 380.60 630.60 317.20 380.60 630.60 317.20 380.60 630.60
Total costs 5,445.80 2,232.80 2,780.40 3,030.40 1,754.00 2,703.00 3,030.40 1,754.00 2,703.00 3,077.80 1,344.40 1,905.80
Total revenue 15,505.40 5,016.60 8,175.00 15,345.00 7,643.80 10,709.80 7,372.40 5,621.60 7,695.20 11,808.00 6,644.20 6,259.40
A. Gains after cost is
deducted 10,059.60 2,783.80 5,394.60 12,314.60 5,889.80 8,006.80 4,342.00 3,867.60 4,992.20 8,730.20 5,299.80 4,353.60
B. Share of the gear/
boat owner 6,739.93 1,865.15 3,614.38 8,250.78 3,946.17 5,364.56 2,909.14 2,591.29 3,344.77 5,849.23 3,550.87 2,916.91
C. Share of the fishing
crew (boso) 3,319.67 918.65 1,780.22 4,063.82 1,943.63 2,642.24 1,432.86 1,276.31 1,647.43 2,880.97 1,748.93 1,436.69

JANUARY TO JUNE 2011


Note: Assuming that number of Fishing Trips per month is 20.

VOL. 52 NO.1
GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS
R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO 135
wage rate (minimum wage rate in Western Visayas is between 193-203
pesos according to National Wages and Productivity Commission).
Results of fishing crew share for year 2 did not show improvement as
it ranged from P 63.82 to P 144.05.

Other Fishing and Non-fishing related activity of fishers

Table 13 shows that only 68 (57.14%) of the respondents had other


sources of income while the remaining were purely dependent on
fishing as their main source of income.

Table 13.

Respondents’ Reply When Asked If They Have Other Sources of Income Other Than
Fishing (Year 2, Period 2)

Response Lapaz San Roque Lawi Total

No 19 15 17 51
(42.85%)

Yes 20 26 22 68
(57.14%)

Total 39 41 39 119

During Year 1, a total of 63 respondents had sources of income


other than fishing. In Year 2, the number of fishers who had other
sources of income had increased to 83.

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


136 GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS
Table 14.

Other Sources of Income of Respondents and Estimated Monthly Income.

Source of Income Year 1 Year 2 Estimated Monthly


(N = 63) (N = 83) Net Income
Multiple Answers

10% share sa uma 0 1 Not stated


Assistance from family member 0 3 3,000.00
Bantay Dagat/Kagawad 0 3 2,890.00
Bodegero 0 1 4,944.00
Fish cage caretaker 0 6 1,125.00
Driver 2 2,900.00
Pang-chainsaw 0 1 3,500.00
Hog-raising (panagod sapat) 22 4 1,162.50
Panabo 4 1 6,000.00
Carpentry 19 15 867.34
Net-mending 5 3 610.00
Charcoal-making (pang-uling/pangahoy) 2 5 1,058.33
Farming (pananom) 8 12 449.29
Construction worker 6 2,251.00
Electrician 0 1 6,000.00
Fish Vending 0 3 1,175.00
Gama kawayan 0 3 520.00
Small business 0 6 640.00
Odd jobs (pamugon)/on-call labor work 3 20 1,059.00

Odd jobs cited as source of income by 20 fishers included pamugon,


pang-ani, and on-call laborers (Table 14). Carpentry ranked second
(n=15) followed by farming or pananom (n=12). However, during
Period 2 of Year 2, the number of respondents who had other sources
of income had decreased (from 83 to 68), meaning that the sources of
income of these 15 respondents during Period 1 were just temporary
or seasonal. The temporary income sources like pamugon and farming
may involve fishers only during farming season.
The sources of income of the respondents who had temporarily
stopped fishing during Period 2 were also determined (Table 15). It
was found that 36 of them had no source of income, five relied on
family’s assistance, nine were laborers or contract workers, five were
involved in farming, and three were involved in small business like
sari-sari stores.

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Table 15.

Source of Income of Respondents Who Temporarily Stopped Fishing (Year 2 / Period 2)


Source of Income Primary Source Average Net Income Second Source Average Net Income

VOL. 52 NO. 1
No income source 52 NA 113 0
Bugkos kahoy 1 366.67 0 0
Business (small)/sari-sari store, rice retailer 2 3,600.00 0 0
Chainsaw 1 1,500.00 0 0
Copra 1 Not indicated 0 0
Driving 2 Est. at 400/day + 3000/2 0 0
Farm laborer/farming 7 4,630.56 0 0
R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO

Fishpond/fish cage caretaker 2 2,250.00 0 0


Gama kawayan 1 Est at 390/week 0 0
Gardening 2 No income yet, est. at 5000/yr 0 0
Hog raising/animal raising 3 1,033.33 1
Honorarium as Kagawad 1 Not indicated
Just wait for the assistance of the family
members/remittance 4 (8500+270$)/2 3 750

JANUARY TO JUNE 2011


Laborer/pamanday/pamugon 27 1,641.25 1 0
Mangrove planting 1 No income yet/ 0 0
new project of DENR
Panabo 1 Not indicated 0 0
Pananom utan, saging, etc 4 2,583.33 0 0
Panghilot/pamulong 1 Not indicated 0 0
Pang-uling 4 175.00 0 0
Poultry farm caretaker 1 3,000.00 0 0
Resort maintenance (in-charge) 1 4,800.00 0 0
Salary/wages 1 3,000.00 0 0

Total 67 6 0

Note: Estimated income per month

SILLIMAN JOURNAL
137
138 GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS
Twenty-eight respondents said that hours spent on sources of
income other than fishing were greater than before oil spill during
Period 1 and when asked again during Period 2, 26 of them said that
hours spent for the present livelihood were still greater (Table 16).
However, almost the same number of respondents also said that there
was no change in the number of hours spent on other livelihood.

Table 16.

Respondent’s Response When Asked if Hours Spent on Livelihood (Other Than Fishing) is
Greater Than Before Oil Spill (Year 2)

Response Period 1 Period 2

Lapaz San Lawi Total Lapaz San Lawi Total


Roque Roque

No 11 8 9 28 7 9 9 25
Yes 8 8 12 28 8 13 5 26
Same 3 5 1 9 0 1 0 1
No other
source of
income 20 21 15 56 24 18 25 67

Total 42 42 37 121 39 41 39 119

Resiliency and Recovery of Fishers

From data showing the average number of fishing time spent before,
during, and after oil spill (Table 17), it is interesting to note that the
average number of fishing trips before and after the oil spill was not
significantly different. This could show that fishers went back to their
usual fishing activity despite their perceived low catch on fishing.
However, the number of fishing trips per month had decreased two
years after oil spill which means that fishing activity was no longer
that active as it was before the oil spill.

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R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO 139
Table 17.

Average Number of Fishing Time Spent on Fishing Before, During, and After Oil Spill

Period No. of trips Fishing trips Fishing trips


per day per week per month

Before oil spill1 1.17 5.83 27.28


During oil spill1 0.05 0.01 0.00
After oil spill (Period 1)2 1.10 4.7 20.68
After oil spill (Period 2)2 1.04 4.2 17.47
2 years after oil spill (Period 1) 0.89 3.47 12.35
2 years after oil spill (Period 2) 0.83 3.68 12.21

Notes:
1
Based on the rapid assessment data (Economic Valuation of the Environmental Damages due
to the MT Solar 1-Petron Oil Spill Offshore Guimaras, Philippines)
2
Based on the first year data monitoring however only affected sites (Lapaz and San Roque)
were included in this analysis since there was no data on fishing trips of Lawi before and during
oil spill.

The average fish catch per trip during oil spill (Table 18) was
expected to be zero because there was no fishing activity. Fish catch
per trip had not improved even two years after the oil spill. There was
still no significant increase in the fish catch per trip. Fish catch per
trip was only subsistence in returns as confirmed from an analysis of
fishing costs and returns.

Table 18.

Average Catch Before, During, and After Oil Spill.

Barangay Average Catch (kg)

Before During After Two Years After

Period 1 Period 2 Period 1 Period 2 Period 1 Period 2

Lapaz 4.86 18.09 0 4.72 5.26 3.90 4.83


(5.03) (17.14) (2.73) (3.56) (2.64) (1.01)
San Roque 3.73 15.01 0 3.0 2.88 3.09 3.09
(4.01) (14.08) (2.25) (1.97) (2.33) (1.95)
Lawi 3.70 16.85 0 3.23 3.94 3.18 2.95
(3.96) (15.81) (2.69) (2.76) (2.14) (3.45)

Note: Figures in parentheses are standard deviations


*outliers deleted

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


140 GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS
The data on the usual catch of fishers before and two years after
the oil spill (Table 19) was based on the fishers’ claims. Before oil spill
(during the months of November to December), fishers claimed that
they were able to catch an average of 12.75kg to 28.64 kg of fish per
fishing trip. Two years after the oil spill, they claimed that average fish
catch had decreased dramatically to 3.0 kg to 3.54 kg per fishing trip.

Table 19.

Perceived Usual Catch Before Oil Spill and Two Years After the Oil Spill.

Barangay Perceived Usual Catch (kg)

Before Oil Spill After Oil Spill

Period 1 Period 2 Period 1 Period 2

Lapaz 12.75 17.61 3.54 5.29


(10.64) (9.02) (3.31) (3.46)
San Roque 14.82 10.45 3.45 3.35
(14.95) (7.14) (4.33) (4.33)
Lawi 28.64 17.13 3.0 3.81
(36.28) (15.32) (2.65) (3.52)

Note: Figures in parenthesis are standard deviations

Summary, Conclusion,
and Recommendations

An assessment of the status of fishers and fishing activities of the oil


spill-affected communities found that the oil spill directly affected
the fishers in Guimaras, Philippines. A two-year monitoring study
provided the basis for determining how the fishers were able to
recover or go back to their livelihood.
Results of the first and second year socio-economic monitoring
revealed that majority of the fishers in Brgys. Lapaz and San Roque
Lawi have gone back to fishing after the oil spill. However, fish catch
two years after the oil spill did not significantly improve regardless
of site. The average fish catch per trip two years after the oil spill was
estimated at 3 to 4 kg per fishing trip. The respondents perceived an
even worse situation two years after the oil spill. They also pointed

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO 141
out that fish catch even prior to oil spill was already low.
When fishers were asked if they still engaged in fishing given the
perception that they can hardly catch fish, 80% continued fishing while
nearly 20% of the respondents either temporarily or permanently stopped
fishing. Fish catch according to some respondents was sometimes just
enough for family’s consumption. In addition, fishing revenue could not
offset fishing costs. In spite of this, fisher-respondents continued fishing,
the latter having been their main source of income.
The number of fishing trips had decreased two years after the oil
spill from an average of four fishing trips per week during Year 1 to
an average of three fishing trips per week in year 2. Number of fishing
trips had declined since fish catch was low and it was disincentive for
the fishers to go out fishing.
Many fishers had to stop fishing because fishing income or revenue
could not offset the fishing operation cost. Share of the fishing crew
ranged from 45.93 to 203.19 pesos in Year 1, while in Year 2, it ranged
from P 63.82 to P 144.05. Gain from fishing was relatively small and
was below the minimum wage rate. Translating the income derived
from fishing per month revealed that income was subsistence in
returns and was below the poverty threshold. Access to other income
sources was also limited and resulted in continued pressure on fishing
resources. Educational attainment of the respondents was low and this
may explain the limitation of their skills to labor work. Indicators of
recovery are bleak among the affected fishers of Guimaras as revealed
through the data on their fishing efforts and fish catch.
Fisher-respondents who stopped fishing resorted to other sources
of income. Many were laborers; others relied on family’s assistance,
while some engaged in small businesses like sari-sari (retail) stores.
In order to improve the socio-economic condition of fishers in
Guimaras, the following recommendations may be considered:

1. Support state policies for wider and comprehensive payback


for fishers from oil polluters. A fishers’ cooperative may be
encouraged to propose a better compensation package.
2. Improve the condition of the coastal environment through
integrated coastal management and intensive campaign
against illegal fishing. Considering that fish catch is getting
worse, a biological assessment of the coastal environment is
necessary to determine other impacts on the environment.
Collaboration with others must be undertaken to create a
comprehensive strategy to improve the whole system.

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142 GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS

3. Ask government assistance for other sources of income (i.e.


farming and animal raising). A soft loan financial scheme may
be provided that will give them the capacity to generate profit
and lessen dependence on fishing. Other livelihood programs
to augment family income include basket weaving or bamboo
products making.
4. The local government in collaboration with other agencies
may also provide training on carpentry and welding for young
fishers who might have a chance to work abroad and in return
assure remittance to their family.
5. Subject to the availability of local government funds,
scholarships for deserving fishers’ children may be provided.
Considering that fishers’ income is below the poverty
threshold, their children, once graduated and earning may
eventually help support the family.
6. Finally, considering that most areas in Guimaras island are
still in pristine condition despite the impact of oil spill in the
area, an intensive information campaign for tourism will
provide another opportunity for people to earn and eventually
support environment conservation. Some fishers may be
involved in tourism programs to help lessen pressure on the
fishing environment.

References

Born F. et al. (2003, July-August). Effects of the Jessica oil spill on artisanal fisheries
in the Galápagos. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 47, 7-8, 319-324.

Pido M. et al. (2009). Socio-economic monitoring (SocMon) as a tool in the


management of Marine Protected Areas: Participatory process and initial
results in Palawan Province, Philippines. Retrieved from http://www.nova.edu/
ncri/11icrs/abstract_files/icrs2008-000235.pdf

Siwar, C., Ibrahim, M., Harizan H. S., & Kamaruddin, R. (2006). Impact of tsunami on
fishing, aquaculture, and coastal communities in Malaysia. Retrieved from http://
www.icsu-asia-pacific.org/resource_centre/Chamhuri-Tsunami.pdf

Subade, R. (1991). Profitability and economic efficiency in gillnet fishing in Guimaras


strait and adjacent waters, Western Visayas, Philippines. (Unpublished master’s
thesis.) Universiti Pertanian, Malaysia.

ITOPF. (2003). Oil spill effects on fisheries. Technical Information Paper. Retrieved
from http://www.itopf.com/uploads/tip3.pdf

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


Participatory Conservation in
the Philippines:
The Case of Luyang Mangrove Reserve in
Siquijor, Central Philippines

Marla R. Chassels
Formerly with the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences,
Washington State University
Now with the University of Hawaii at Manoa

Abner A. Bucol
Silliman University Angelo King Center for Research and
Environmental Management, Dumaguete City

In this paper, we present the results of a case study (conducted


in 2006-2007) of Luyang Mangrove Reserve, a project managed
by a local fisherfolks’ association on the island of Siquijor in the
central Visayas region of the Philippines. We determined the level
of environmental awareness and perception of the community on
the mangrove reserve. Crucial issues and shortcomings are also
presented for possible improvements of participatory conservation
effort in the Philippines.

Keywords: ecotourism, mangrove, fisherfolk, livelihood,


Philippines

Introduction

M
angrove forests are among the world’s most productive
ecosystems (Calumpong & Meñez, 1997). They enrich
coastal waters, yield commercial forest products, protect
coastlines, and support coastal fisheries (Kathiresan & Bingham,
2001). However, mangrove ecosystems are rapidly declining in many
parts of the world resulting in the loss of important environmental
and economic products and services including forest products, flood
mitigation, and nursery grounds for fish (Kathiresan & Bingham,
2001). Polidoro et al. (2010) projected that 16% of 70 species are at

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


144 PARTICIPATORY CONSERVATION IN SIQUIJOR
elevated threat to global extinction.
In the Philippines, approximately half of the 279,000 ha of
mangroves have been lost from 1951 to 1988 due to aquaculture
development and other human activities (Primavera, 2000), although
conversion of the remaining mangrove stands was already prohibited
by law in 1981 (Ron & Padilla, 1999). To address this problem, several
approaches have been implemented elsewhere in the country, one
of which includes community-based reforestation and protection of
remaining mangrove stands.
The success of Apo Island Marine Reserve, the first community-
based conservation in the country, has been described by many authors
in terms of biological restoration and ecotourism (Oracion, 2006a,b,
2007; Alcala, Bucol, & Nillos-Kleiven, 2008). However, the shift in the
management scheme from bottom-top to top-bottom approach due
to implementation of the National Integrated Protected Area Systems
(NIPAS) Act of 1991 also gained criticism (see Hind, Hiponia, & Gray
2010). Like Apo Island, many protected areas in the Philippines have
both positive and negative management experiences.
The present paper describes a case study done in Siquijor Island
on the level of awareness of the stakeholders in terms of the over-all
status of the environment, natural resource in the area, and knowledge
on the mangrove protected area, including management controversies
and issues that might serve as lessons for other community-based
participatory conservation initiatives.

Methods

The Study Site

The Luyang Mangrove Reserve is located in Barangay Luyang


(9.23616°N, 123.56295°E), Siquijor, Siquijor (Figure 1). It has an area of
10.0 hectares of mangroves, dominated by pagatpat (Sonneratia alba).
This strip of mangroves is continuous to the west in Olo, Siquijor and
to the northeast in Sabang, Larena. By coastal highway, this reserve
lies approximately six kilometers from downtown Siquijor and four
kilometers from downtown Larena in the municipality to the east.
The mangrove reserve was established in 2003 by St. Catherine
Family Helper Project Inc. (SCFHPI), a non-government organization
based in Dumaguete City, through the Siquijor Integrated
Management of Coastal Resources (SIMCOR) Project in collaboration

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


M.R. CHASSELS AND A.A. BUCOL 145

Figure 1. Map of Coastal Resources in the Province of Siquijor. Courtesy of the Siquijor
Coastal Resource Enhancement (SCORE) Project and Siquijor Information Management
Unit (SIMU). Location of Barangay Luyang indicated by a shaded arrow.

with the local government unit (LGU), and the Bureau of Fisheries
and Aquatic Resources (BFAR). The local people’s organization, the
Luyang Fisherfolks’ Association (LUFA) is managing the mangrove
reserve and is at the same time operating the Guiwanon Spring Park
Resort as an income-generating project.

Data Gathering

We conducted semi-structured interviews (N=41) with the pre-


determined stakeholders in the vicinity of Luyang Mangrove Reserve
in 2006-2007. Prior to the survey, the Principal Investigator (M.
Chassels) consulted with the barangay captain (head of the local
community) and explained the purpose of the study. We then began
individualized introductions of the project to potential participants.
Staff working at Guiwanon Spring Park helped identify current,
inactive, and former LUFA members and gave directions to their
homes. We then spent several days going from house to house to
make the subjects more familiar with us and what we were doing
in the community. In any case, these unstructured interviews were a
valuable tool for acquiring background data, building rapport, and

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146 PARTICIPATORY CONSERVATION IN SIQUIJOR
familiarizing participants with the research.
We asked respondents to sign a consent form agreeing to be a
part of the study and granting permission to audiotape the interview.
Interviews were audio-taped using a microcassette for transcription
purposes. The questions were in three categories: socio-economic
background, environmental awareness, and the protected area/
environmental conservation project. We intentionally incorporated
some redundancies in the questions to check if the same subject area
when approached in a different way might generate more complete
responses. We tailored the questions in a manner that would better
translate linguistically and culturally. After the first set of interviews,
we re-examined the questions and rephrased and expanded them as
deemed necessary.
When the interviews were completed, we asked the respondents’
permission to photograph them, their families, and their homes.
These photographs served as further evidence of economic status.

Results and Discussion

Socio-Economic Status and the Perception of Poverty

If one relied on interview transcriptions alone, one could easily


conclude that most of our subjects were of the same, poor, economic
status. However, when field notes and photographs were compared
with the interview responses, a common incongruity became apparent.
Despite drastic, observable differences in the quality of domiciles and
standards of living, most respondents described their own situation
as though they were living dangerously close to or below the poverty
line. Residents of cement houses with metal roofs, running water,
and indoor, tiled comfort rooms (CRs) described the same standard
of living as community members inhabiting dilapidated structures
with no running water and an unfinished, exterior CR. We find it very
difficult to believe that subjects with office jobs, big screen televisions,
and abundant carved and/or upholstered furniture endured the same
threat of poverty as those surviving off of the land/sea or manual
labor whose houses were furnished with rudimentary basics. Often,
even houses with dirt floors would contain small television sets and
stereos; however, some houses did not have any element of luxury.
Many interviewees likely underrepresented their economic status,
probably due to a colonial mindset.

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M.R. CHASSELS AND A.A. BUCOL 147
Because the succeeding sections will tackle some management
issues involving the fisherfolk association and the community, we
opted not to present photos of houses mentioned above so as to
protect the interest of our sources.

Environmental Awareness

In general, the concept of natural resources was poorly understood.


The phrase was difficult to translate to Cebuano, and even when
translated, it holds little meaning. If any examples of natural resources
were given to aid comprehension, then respondents seemed to think
that the example was the actual definition of a natural resource. At
least 46.3% of the respondents could list one or two resources beyond
any example given, while only 7.3% could list three or more natural
resources (Table 1). Even though they could list few, if any, natural
resources found in their community, they could identify ways in
which they relied upon mangroves and the sea as sources of products.
Only 85.3% of respondents were asked if they viewed mangroves
and corals as beneficial (Table 1). Of these, 100% stated that the
mangroves and/or corals are beneficial. Additionally, 51.2% of them
recognized mangroves and/or coral as breeding ground, shelter,
and/or habitat for fish and sea life while 17.1% of them named other
benefits of mangroves and corals (Table 1). In fact, many community
members articulated benefits of mangroves and corals quite well.
There have been several educational campaigns and seminars in
Siquijor on coastal resources. It is possible that such widespread
awareness of the benefits of mangroves and corals can be attributed
to the success of these efforts.
Views on the sustainability of resource use were mixed
(Table 1). There were 19.5% of the respondents who expressed
unconditional optimism that natural resources will be available for
future generations. Many of them credited the protected area as the
reason resources would be available while 48.8% of them articulated
conditional optimism that resources would be available in the future.
They expressed that the sustainability of resources is contingent upon
certain conditions such as the cessation of illegal fishing. On the other
hand, 14.6% expressed doubts that natural resources will be available
for future generations.
The interconnectedness among different aspects of nature was
poorly understood. Most respondents did not associate the way one
person uses land as affecting other land around him/her. While 56.1%

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148 PARTICIPATORY CONSERVATION IN SIQUIJOR

Table 1.

Results on the Environmental Awareness of the Respondents (N=41)

Environmental Awareness No. %

I. Identification of Natural Resources:


Three or more resources identified beyond any example given 3 7.32
One or two resources identified beyond any example given 19 46.34
Concept poorly understood / example given was reiterated 10 24.39
No response / concept not understood 7 17.07
None / natural resources are lacking 2 4.88

II. Benefits of mangroves and corals:
Viewed as beneficial 35 85.37
Recognized as breeding grounds/shelter/habitat for fish
and sea life 21 51.22
Other benefits articulated 8 19.51
Not asked 6 14.63

III. Sustainability of resource use:
Optimism that natural resources will be available for
future generations 8 19.51
Conditional optimism expressed 20 48.78
Doubts that natural resources will be available for
future generations 6 14.63
Uncertain 4 9.76
No response 1 2.44
Not asked 2 4.88

IV. Interconnectedness among different aspects of nature:
No effects perceived of land use on neighboring land 23 56.10
Some effects of land use or complaints of neighbors’
practices mentioned 5 12.20
Land use impacts well-understood on a larger scale 0 0.00
No relevant response 5 12.20
Not asked 8 19.51

expressed that they were not affected by the way their neighbors
use their land (Table 1), it may be important to note that in Filipino
culture, individuals do not usually criticize or unearth the secrets of
their neighbors especially if the person being asked has benefited
from his/her neighbor’s help.

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M.R. CHASSELS AND A.A. BUCOL 149
Table 2.

Community Perception on the Mangrove Protected Area

Community perception No. %

I. Support for the mangrove protected area:


Supported/benefits seen 36 87.80
Opposed/negative opinions articulated 1 2.44
Unclear 4 9.76

II. Misgivings prior to establishment of protected area:
No misgivings identified 27 65.85
Misgivings identified 6 14.63
No response 1 2.44
Not asked 7 17.07

III. Community consultation prior to establishment of protected area:
Individual stated the community had been consulted or
informed 28 68.29
Individual felt the community had not been adequately
consulted, represented, or informed 1 2.44
Uncertain 4 9.76
No response 1 2.44
Not asked 7 17.07

Perceptions of the Mangrove Protected Area

Support for the mangrove protected area was virtually universal


in Luyang (Table 2), where 87.8% of respondents clearly supported
or saw the benefits of the mangrove protected area. Only 2.4% (one
respondent) expressed negative opinions. It was unclear how the
remaining 9.8% felt about the mangrove protected area. There were
65.9% who did not express having had any misgivings about the
establishment of the protected area when it was first introduced while
14.6% identified some initial misgivings. Some of the respondents
(17.1%) were not asked about this topic.
We suspect that even if more respondents had had misgivings
about the establishment of the protected area, they would not have
been likely to admit to that after the project showed signs of success.
The concept of the “right” answer is very strong in the Filipino
education system and is perpetuated into adulthood. It is usually
considered unacceptable to be unsure or incorrect. Therefore, many

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150 PARTICIPATORY CONSERVATION IN SIQUIJOR
Filipinos go along with the status quo and retract previous statements
that may prove to be “wrong.”
The majority of respondents (82.9%) were asked if the community
had been consulted prior to the establishment of the mangrove
protected area (Table 2); 68.3% stated that the community had been
consulted or informed. In most instances, consultation was considered
equivalent to being informed. Only one, representing 2.4% of the
total, felt that the community had not been adequately consulted,
represented, or informed about the establishment of the mangrove
protected area while 9.8% were uncertain about consultation. Because
consultation was synonymous with being informed, it is difficult to
determine whether true community consultations took place in which
stakeholders’ concerns and interests were addressed and influenced
is the establishment of the protected area in any way.
After the establishment of the protected area, interviewees cited
noticeable improvements in the health of the mangroves. One aspect
repeatedly mentioned was that the branches of the mangroves used
to be cut way back to feed cattle (especially during the dry months of
March to May) and that the branches have recovered.
It is interesting (but disturbing) that some of the activities
claimed by most respondents to have “ceased” after the mangrove
protected area was established still persist. Interviewees explained
that “formerly” the spring was used for laundering clothes, the
intertidal area was used for washing cattle, and the mangroves were
used for fuel. LUFA’s draft brochure even states, “in the recent past,
this area was used as a pasture, as a laundromat, [and] as a source
of firewood.” Community members seemed well aware that these
actions are detrimental to the mangroves, but they are also turning a
blind eye to the fact that they still continue.
Undoubtedly, the rate of detrimental use has decreased, but
nonetheless, one of us (M. Chassels) personally witnessed these
activities on more than one occasion. Community laundry sessions
were not a completely uncommon sight in the spring. Additionally,
when LUFA members washed the laundry and dishes from Guiwanon,
they dumped the soapy water off the boardwalk and into the tidal
area below. Cattle were still led through the mangroves and under the
boardwalks to be washed in the seawater. LUFA members have also
peeled sacks of bark off of the mangroves at Guiwanon for their own
benefit—either to personally use as fuel or to sell for this purpose.
Supplementing the data from interviews with first-hand observations
gives a clearer picture of what is happening in the community.

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M.R. CHASSELS AND A.A. BUCOL 151

Controversies / Issues

During the course of the interview, several issues arose beyond the
scope of the original interview guide. The most puzzling of these
issues is that the vast majority of the Luyang Fisherfolks’ Association
members are not actually sustenance fishers. The few (about five)
members who do fish, do so recreationally instead of as a source
of income or livelihood. The Philippine government’s definition
of fisherfolk (see Republic Act 8550), however, may include those
that are not actually fishers such as occasional gleaners. The other
fisherfolk organizations such as Tubod Fisherfolk Association are also
dominated by non-fishers (A. Bucol, pers. obs.).
Why are there so many non-sustenance fisher members of LUFA?
It seems that the majority of LUFA members joined the organization
either because they were interested in improving the mangroves
or because their peers (friends) had joined the organization. Core
LUFA members participated in the educational seminars and project
planning meetings hosted by SCFHPI and other coastal resource
programs. The remainder of members joined LUFA as more of a social
networking activity.
Why are the primary local fisherfolk not members of LUFA? When
asked about this, the local fisherfolk who rely upon the sea for their
livelihood responded that they did not have the time or money to be
part of LUFA. They must spend their time hard at work to continue
to meet their families’ needs [rather than on-duty at Guiwanon or at
LUFA meetings]. They cannot afford to take time away from fishing
or to pay monthly membership dues. Also evident was a social
dichotomy. While there certainly are some members of LUFA with
much lower socio-economic status than others, the overall impression
of the local fisherfolk seems to be that the LUFA members are well-
educated office workers with whom they would not be comfortable
associating.
The social dichotomy is most likely the genuine cause for lack
of fisherfolk membership in LUFA. While it is true that monthly
membership dues must be paid, the LUFA members also share the
profits of Guiwanon Spring Park Resort, so the monetary issue cancels
itself out. It is also true that fisherfolk must spend a vast amount of time
hard at work. However, there is also clearly down time to engage in
recreational activities such as drinking circles and cock-fighting (tare/
sabong/tigbakay). Therefore, if motivated to do so, the local fisherfolk

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152 PARTICIPATORY CONSERVATION IN SIQUIJOR
could find the means to participate in an association. The question
becomes: why should they join an association that does not represent
their interests and needs?
Another controversial issue in Luyang is illegal fishing. While
highly destructive, illegal methods such as dynamite (blast) fishing are
not used, there are still methods currently employed that have been
banned. Use of these illegal fishing methods is typically recognized,
but ignored. LUFA members may on occasion make derogatory
remarks about illegal fishing, but they do not report such activities
even though they have a perfect vantage point to witness them. On
the other hand, the actual fisherfolk dependent upon fishing for their
livelihood are resentful of LUFA members who fish recreationally.
The fisherfolk are struggling to make a living from the sea and feel it is
inappropriate for recreational fishers to create greater competition for
these resources. The fisherfolk also clearly object to the use of illegal
fishing methods by recreational fishers. While they may use illegal
methods themselves, the fisherfolk seem to feel somewhat justified in
doing so because of the difficulty of this livelihood. At the same time,
recreational fishers who use illegal practices are faulted with unfairly
depleting the fishing stock.
One interviewee was particularly upset because, according to him,
LUFA officers were engaging in illegal fishing practices. Of particular
note, one officer accused of illegal fishing is also a member of the
Bantay Dagat, supposedly a “civilian fisheries patrol force made up
of volunteers that try to keep a 24 hour watch on Philippine coastal
waters up to 15 kilometers from shore” [Bantay Dagat (Sea Patrol)
Forces, n.d.]. So it would be doubly hypocritical for a LUFA officer
and member of the Bantay Dagat to engage in illegal fishing practices.
The interviewee discussing this situation used it as a reason for his
disinterest in joining the association.
Toward the end of the study, seminars and community
consultations were being held in Luyang and neighboring barangays
regarding the possibility of creating an expanded marine protected
area. The possibility of expanding the protected area in Luyang
further out into the coastal waters cropped up repeatedly during
interviews. This local issue was more the subject of speculation than of
opposition. One thing was clear, however. Community consultations
were targeting participation of key LUFA members and not a more
inclusive sampling of other key stakeholders, e.g. the actual fisherfolk
of the area.

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M.R. CHASSELS AND A.A. BUCOL 153

Conclusion

This case study stressed three major findings, which probably


describes the status of participatory conservation in Luyang
Mangrove Reserve, Siquijor Island: 1) high level of environmental
awareness among stakeholders which might be attributed to several
education campaigns conducted by NGOs, LGUs, and academic
institutions; 2) lack of participation among primary stakeholders (i.e.
full-time fisherfolk), which might be a result of social dichotomy; and
3) persistence of violations within the protected area due to weak
enforcement.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the Barangay Officials of Luyang, Siquijor as well as the
officers of Luyang Fisherfolk Association for their cooperation during the conduct
of the study. Dr. Enrique Oracion (Silliman University) is also thanked for providing
comments and suggestions on an earlier draft of the manuscript.

References

Alcala, A. C., Bucol, A. A., & Nillos-Kleiven, P. (2008). Directory of marine reserves
in the Visayas, Philippines. Foundation for the Philippine Environment (FPE)
and Silliman University-Angelo King Center for Research and Environmental
Management (SUAKCREM). Dumaguete City, Philippines.

Calumpong, H., & Meñez, E. (1997). Field guide to the common mangroves,
seagrasses, and algae of the Philippines. Manila: Bookmark.

Hind, E.J., Hiponia, M.C., & Gray, T.S. (2010). From community-based to centralised
national management—A wrong turning for the governance of the marine
protected area in Apo Island, Philippines? Marine Policy, 34 (1), 54-62.

Kathiresan, K., & Bingham, B.L. (2001). Biology of mangroves and mangrove
ecosystems. Advances in Marine Biology, 40, 81-251.

Oracion, E.G. (2006a). Are the children willing? Intergenerational support for marine
protected area sustainablity. Silliman Journal, 47 (1), 48-74.

Oracion, E.G. (2006b). The economic benefits of marine protected areas. Silliman
Journal, 47 (2), 115-139.

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154 PARTICIPATORY CONSERVATION IN SIQUIJOR
Oracion, E.G. (2007). Dive tourism, coastal resource management, and local
government in Dauin. Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society, 35, 149-178.

Polidoro, B.A., Carpenter, K.E., Collins, L., Duke, N.C., Ellison, A.M., Ellison, J.C.,
Farnsworth, E.J., Fernando, E.S., Kathiresan, K., Koedam, N.E., Livingstone,
S.R., Miyagi, T., Moore, G.E., Nam, V.N., Ong, J.E., Primavera, J.H., Salmo, S.G.
III, Sanciangco, J.C., Sukardjo, S., Wang, Y., & Yong, J.W.H. (2010). The loss of
species: Mangrove extinction risk and geographic areas of global concern. PLoS
ONE 5 (4): e10095. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0010095.

Primavera, J.H. (2000). Development and conservation of Philippine mangroves:


Institutional issues. Ecol Econ, 35, 91-106.

Ron, J., & Padilla, J.E. (1999). Preservation or conversion? Valuation and evaluation
of a mangrove forest in the Philippines. Environmental and Resource Economics,
14 (3), 297-331.

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


Tagapagligtas, Ilaw, Kasama:
Religiosity Among
Filipino Domestic Workers
in Hong Kong

Betty Cernol-McCann
United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia
Hong Kong

Margaret Helen U. Alvarez


College of Arts and Sciences, Silliman University
Dumaguete, Philippines

Dennis P. McCann
Agnes Scott College
Decatur, GA, USA

The plight of Filipino domestic workers abroad is much


documented, especially in relation to economic pressures and
psycho-emotional stresses. This paper investigated their patterns
of coping by looking at their religious activities and attitudes
towards their situation and life away from their families and country.
A quantitative-qualitative study done in 2005 was supplemented
by interviews made in 2009.
In the 2005 study, the majority of the 121 respondents
were college-educated, young adults, married with children,
and had been working in Hong Kong for over a year. Many of
those who indicated they were single had also left children in the
Philippines. Similar demographics were characteristic of the 17
Filipinas interviewed in 2009, but this group was made up mostly
of residents of Bethune House who had taken shelter there after
having experienced significant difficulties with their employers.
In the 2005 study, virtually all (118 out of the 121 respondents)
reported attending church in Hong Kong—most of them of the
Roman Catholic faith. Attending church is an activity that gives
them inner peace and wholeness and also allows them a fellowship
with other Filipinos. Prayers focused on practical problems, for
example, personal health and family members’ health so that they
could remain employed in Hong Kong, as well as the welfare of
their employers and the Hong Kong economy. The religious person

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156 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
is one who has personal discipline and applies this discipline to life
and circumstances. God is viewed as powerful above all things,
tagapagligtas (Savior), ilaw (guiding light), kasama (companion).
In the 2009 study, while the primary focus was on the respondents’
happiness or well-being in general, the importance of religiosity for
them was evident in their ranking of God (Religion) as a source of
happiness higher than family, friends, and work.
It was confirmed that Filipina domestic workers derive much
comfort and support from a strong and active faith that in their
view is crucial for their survival in Hong Kong. This conclusion
is offered in order to stimulate further research on the role of
churches and religious institutions in supporting Filipinas who
must work overseas to meet the needs of their families.

Keywords: religiosity, spirituality, foreign domestic helpers,


women’s migrant labor, Hong Kong

Background of the Study

O
n any given Sunday in the Central District in Hong Kong,
visitors are likely to encounter masses of Filipina domestic
helpers, catching up with friends and acquaintances from their
home provinces in the Philippines, buying or selling “load” for their
mobile phones, lining up to make remittances at the branch offices
of major Philippine banks, or simply relaxing on their one day off a
week. These women may be regarded by some as a tourist attraction,
“a spectacular site” (Constable, 1997) now well entrenched as part
of Hong Kong’s social landscape (Tam, 1999), but to those whose
relatives may be among the helpers hanging out at Statue Square or
seeking shelter in the vast shady space created for Feng Shui purposes
under the HSBC building, the sight of so many Filipinas may evoke
mixed emotions: dismay that so many of our fellow citizens have
had to seek employment abroad, joy in the company of so many
sisters whose laughter resonates so deeply with one’s own heart, and
perhaps, curiosity, an eagerness to learn where they came from, how
they got here, how they manage not only to survive but to remain
proudly and incorrigibly Filipina, in spite of the hardships that they
have had to endure and that we somehow have been spared.
Our study is a result of efforts to turn these mixed emotions to
good account, in the hope of learning from our sisters. It seeks to

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B.C. McCANN, M.H.U. ALVAREZ, AND D.P. McCANN 157

begin an investigation into one of the major sources of their strength


and resiliency in coping with the heavy burdens they bear as “Heroes
of the Filipino People.” After rubbing shoulders with them in various
ways for many years, here we will attempt to share the results of
interviews that we believe may help our readers to understand better
the role of religious faith and practice in their lives as foreign domestic
helpers. While our investigation is preliminary and hardly scientific
in any definitive sense, it is offered in the hope of stimulating further
research and discussion. We contend that religious faith and practice
are a crucial, though often neglected dimension of the experiences
reported to us in these interviews. We hope to convince the reader
that religion and spirituality play an important role in sustaining the
mental health of Filipina domestic helpers working in Hong Kong.
As such they must be factored into any well-informed explanation
of the resourcefulness and resiliency of most Filipina workers
because these factors empower so many of the workers to preserve
their basic humanity under often stressful circumstances. This essay
is meant to open a discussion of the role of religion and spirituality
among the domestic helpers. This is also meant as a challenge not
only to previous academic studies of women’s migrant labor under
conditions of globalization but also to religious institutions both at
home and abroad to render pastoral support for these women more
effectively.
Let us begin our inquiry with the Filipinas on their Sundays in
Hong Kong, since this was the day of the week when most of our
interviews were conducted. The Central District in Hong Kong is a
convenient location for various reasons. Statue Square, which fronts
Hong Kong’s “Legco” or Legislative Council building, is the terminal
point for various political demonstrations, and thus well known to
the tens of thousands who have participated in the protests against
the various forms of discrimination and abuse that they routinely
endure in Hong Kong. Statue Square is just two blocks away from
the Mission for Migrant Workers1, an NGO founded by Filipinas,
former domestic helpers themselves. It, among other things, sponsors
Bethune House, a shelter where domestic helpers may find sanctuary
when they get into serious trouble with either their employers
or the government. After documenting their cases, the Mission
provides legal aid as well as counseling and other support services,
while Bethune House gives them a place to stay as they await the
disposition of their cases before the Labour Tribunal (Constable,
1997). St. John’s Anglican Cathedral, where the MFMW has its offices,

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158 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
is half way up Garden Road. Further up the hill just beyond the US
Consulate is St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, whose Sunday masses in
Tagalog and English are packed with Filipinas who consistently form
the bulk of the congregation worshipping there. One readily observes
the Filipinas moving in groups up and down Garden Road, visiting
the churches, as friends and relatives save their spaces for them in
and around Statue Square or over at Exchange Square, opposite the
World Wide House, where the remittance centers as well as various
boutiques catering to Philippine tastes may be found.
The history of foreign domestic helpers in Hong Kong began in
1969, when expatriates were allowed to bring along their servants
from overseas (Tam, 1999). In 2007, Filipinas were still the largest
nationality group of domestic helpers, followed by groups from
Indonesia and Thailand (Rivera, 2007). It is estimated that in 2010 only
48% of the 284,901 foreign domestic helpers living and working in
Hong Kong were from the Philippines, while it is commonly reported
that 90% of the Filipino residents in Hong Kong are domestic helpers.2
These trends indicate not only Hong Kong’s increasing reliance on
foreign domestic helpers but also a decreasing share of that work
going to Filipinas. The dramatic rise in the number of Indonesians
employed as domestic helpers may reflect the fact that Hong Kong
employers generally regard the Indonesians as more manageable and
often willing to work for less than the minimum wage. The Filipinas’
superior skills in social networking, and greater awareness of their
rights under HKSAR law, may actually make them less competitive
than helpers hailing from Indonesia and Thailand.
Filipinas bound for service in Hong Kong are usually recruited
through employment agencies or by the word of mouth of helpers who
make referrals for relatives and friends (Tam, 1999). The regulatory
framework for such employment is established through a series
of bilateral agreements between Hong Kong and the Philippines,
dating back to the Marcos regime. The work visa specific to foreign
domestic helpers restricts them to domestic duties in service to a
specific employer. The official “Employment Contract for a Domestic
Worker Recruited Outside of Hong Kong” governs relations between
the helpers and their Hong Kong employers (Constable, 2003). The
contract outlines the rights and obligations of both the helper and the
employer. Covering a two-year period, it can be legally terminated
with one month’s notice or one month’s pay in lieu of notice by
either the helper or the employer. A helper whose contract ends or
is terminated is usually required to return to the Philippines within

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B.C. McCANN, M.H.U. ALVAREZ, AND D.P. McCANN 159
two weeks.
Foreign domestic helpers in Hong Kong had been receiving
a monthly minimum allowable wage (MAW) of HK$3,400 until an
increase of HK$80 was given effective June 6, 2007 (Rivera, 2007). For
all contracts signed after July 2008, the MAW is now set at HK$3,5803.
Aside from wages, the contract stipulates the helper’s holidays and
benefits, and the employer’s responsibilities for providing suitable
and furnished accommodation and food free of charge, as well
as a list of reimbursable fees and expenses4. In exchange for these
considerations, the contract stipulates a range of “domestic duties”
that helpers are expected to perform, specifically including “household
chores, cooking, looking after aged persons in the household, baby-
sitting, and child minding” as well as other unspecified services. The
HKSAR Immigration Department’s rulings on “Foreign Domestic
Helpers” are quite detailed on what may and may not be demanded
of them5. While such regulations may be intended to protect the
helpers, they are in fact difficult to enforce (Constable, 2003). The
many violations of these contracts have been well documented by
migrant and labor organizations based in Hong Kong, as well as
various foreign observers, including Constable (1997, 1999), Momsen
(1999), and Ehrenreich and Hochschild (2002).
In taking a step back from the immediate situation facing domestic
helpers in Hong Kong, we must remind ourselves that the migration of
Filipino workers has become so commonplace that the Filipino family
without members working abroad is now a thing of the past. With
good reason, Padilla (1994) describes this phenomenon as the creation
of a Filipino diaspora, literally “the scattering of Filipinos all over the
world.” He further characterizes it as “the road from bagumbayan”—
the road of the diaspora. The term Bagumbayan comes from the
Filipino word “bagong bayan,” literally meaning New Country or
New Town. Its historic significance stems, in Padilla’s view, from two
ways of interpreting bagumbayan: there is the road to bagumbayan—
raising the question “What happened to us?”—and the road from
bagumbayan—which shifts the focus to “What lies ahead of us?”
(Padilla, 1998).
Answers to these questions have usually concentrated on
explaining the structural characteristics of Philippine history, with
particular emphasis on the political economy and globalization. Such
perspectives tend to highlight the ways in which labor migration is
controlled, regulated, and sponsored by states, whose priorities are
governed less by humanitarian concerns than by capitalist interests,

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160 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
reflecting the power of local elites as well as the international financial
system (Aguilar, 2002). While such analyses may help inspire
organized resistance to globalization, they also prompt observers to
lose sight of the fact that migrants are not just victims but subjects
capable of actively responding to the opportunities and constraints
that confront them. As sociologist Maruja Asis notes, “when we
deploy overseas workers, we send out human beings, with all their
potentials and vulnerabilities” (Asis, 2002). Thus, receiving countries
have to reckon with human beings, even if their intention may only
have been to exploit cheap foreign labor. “Limiting migrants’ rights,”
as Asis observes, “has not kept migrants from expressing their
humanity. Despite the conditions they find themselves in, or perhaps
because of such conditions, they seek out other migrants, they build
communities or alternative institutions, and some become settlers.”
While Asis’ emphasis on the Overseas Filipino Worker’s (OFW’s)
moral agency has prompted our investigation of the role played by
religion and spirituality, we must acknowledge the context in which
the domestic helpers’ agency is exercised. The global services sector,
in particular, depends upon a markedly gendered labor market,
through which the demand for domestic help in Hong Kong has
been matched with an enthusiastic supply from poorer neighboring
countries (Aguilar, 2002). Because of its geographic proximity and
relatively high wages, Hong Kong has been one of the most popular
destinations for migrant workers from the Philippines (Groves
& Chang, 2002). Once the system was established, the burden of
household chores was relieved for Hong Kong women, thus enabling
them to accept paid employment outside the home, particularly in
managerial positions. Rimban (1999) points to the irony that while
middle-class women in the receiving countries can now afford
domestic helpers and thus pursue careers of their own, it is the
Filipinas who, along with other foreign women, have been brought in
to do the household chores. One consequence, so painfully evident in
Hong Kong, is that the gender discrimination that all women confront
has been compounded by racial discrimination (Lee, 1996). “What
divides women from women,” in the words of psychologist Meredith
Kimball, “are not the political strategies of different feminisms, but
the economic and social differences that are associated with racial and
other forms of domination that operate across gender lines. The issue
of domestic workers is illustrative of these differences.”
The cultural and psychological impact of going abroad to work as
a domestic helper should not be underestimated. Except for Sundays,

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B.C. McCANN, M.H.U. ALVAREZ, AND D.P. McCANN 161
most Filipina domestic helpers live the rest of their week in a condition
of “surreal timelessness” (Parreñas, 2001). They are isolated by racial
and cultural differences from the families they serve in Hong Kong
and removed in both time and space from their families at home. These
post-modern Cinderellas—generally as well-educated as the women
they work for, yet often treated as wayward children, continually
at risk of becoming the object of whatever dysfunctionalities their
employers may be plagued with—are dispossessed of their personal
identities, at least until next Sunday. Their quotidian isolation means
that their experience of the Filipino diaspora is more of an “imagined
community” than as a source of real solidarity (Alegado, 2003). While
our Hong Kong kababayans (compatriots) will never come to know
or meet the great majority of their counterparts, on Sunday they can
at least return symbolically to their barangay, unfailingly marked off
by cardboard and picnic blankets somewhere in the Central District.
There they may be reunited with relatives, schoolmates, and others
from their home neighborhood, and if only for a few hours they can
renew the bonds of culture, national identity, custom and tradition,
that define them as tao. The stress involved in such a surreal existence
inevitably raises questions: How do they survive? How do they
cope as well as they do? What is their support? Does religion and
spirituality play a sustaining role in their lives?
Myers (2005) has described how religion can give people a sense
of purpose and meaning in their lives, help them accept their setbacks
gracefully, connect them to a caring, supportive community, and
comfort them by putting their ultimate mortality in perspective. This
new emphasis on the ways in which religion can help sustain mental
health and overall wellness marks a departure from the skepticism
that marred the work of the major philosophers who paved the way
for the social scientific study of religion in the 20th century, namely,
Hobbes, Hume, Comte, Feuerbach, Marx, Nietzsche and Freud. Such
writers formed what philosopher Paul Ricoeur termed “the school
of suspicion” (1977), whose perspectives have been refuted by later,
more insightful approaches inspired primarily by field work in social
psychology and cultural anthropology. One prominent representative
of this reassessment is Clifford Geertz’s definition of “religion as a
cultural system” (1973) that may serve as deep background for the
present study. We hope to illuminate the religious aspects evident
in the coping patterns of Filipina domestic helpers and determine
whether and to what extent religious faith and practices help them
overcome the stresses they routinely face as OFWs.

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162 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK

Review of Relevant Literature

Previous studies have featured attempts to analyze the mental health


of OFWs but with little attention paid to the role of religion in either
sustaining or subverting it. Psychological studies on the impact of
employment in domestic service overseas have focused on working
conditions (French & Lam, 1988), labor economics (Lane, 1989), and
demographic factors (AMWC, 1991). More recent studies have focused
on stress factors and mental health (Bagley, Madrid, & Bolitho, 1997),
the effects of extended parental absence on the children of migrant
workers (Wolf, 2002; Parreñas, 2003), the challenges and adjustments
involved in their return home (Constable, 1997), the impact of power
differences between the OFWs and their employers (Groves & Chang,
2002; Constable 2002), and the organizational activities of migrant
workers (Asato, 2003; Ogaya, 2003).
While recent studies have underlined the importance of
investigating the impact of working overseas on the children and
families these women leave behind (Wolf, 1997; Scalabrini Migration
Center, 2003-2004), some researchers have also focused on the personal
experiences of the women themselves. In particular, the Hong Kong
study of Bagley, Madrid, and Bolitho (1997) conducted in 1995 among
600 Filipino domestic workers in Hong Kong found that potential
stress factors included employment-related issues; debt problems
in the Philippines; and domestic problems concerning husband,
children, or extended family. Two groups had particularly good
mental health adjustment: one group (14% of the sample) consisted
of single women without dependent children, college educated prior
to emigration, and free of major debts in the Philippines; the other
group (17% of the sample) was composed of women over 30 years
old, who were in their third or subsequent contracts as domestic
helpers, with strong ties to Filipino social organizations, including
many personal friends in Hong Kong. By contrast, two other groups
had particularly poor mental health: one group (7% of the sample)
consisted of women experiencing conflicts with employers over
alleged inefficiency or carelessness, and suffering through various
forms of abuse inflicted by a household member; another group (5 %
of the sample) was composed of women with high debt burdens in
Hong Kong or the Philippines.
Nicole Constable’s (1997) study took a deeper look at the lives

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B.C. McCANN, M.H.U. ALVAREZ, AND D.P. McCANN 163
of Filipina domestic workers in Hong Kong, focusing particularly
on the employer-employee relationship as seen through the eyes of
the employee. Using a theoretical framework influenced by Michel
Foucault, Constable observed the forms of control that Filipina
domestic workers experience and the multiple ways they responded
to the disciplines imposed by their employers, noting the dynamics
of resistance and protest, docility and self-discipline, pleasure and
power. In each of these sets, Constable shows how the complexity
of Filipina responses makes their experiences difficult to interpret
according to standard binary paradigms of oppressed and oppressors.
Similarly, Stiell and England’s (1999) study looked at the employer-
employee relationship as experienced by Filipina domestic workers
in Toronto, Canada. Their investigation compared the Filipinas with
Jamaican and English domestics, and found evidence to support the
notion that they are comparatively more “docile, subservient, hard-
working, good-natured, domesticated, and willing to endure long
hours of housework and child care with little complaint.” Indeed,
it appears that Filipinas have the dubious reputation in Canada of
being preferred “because they are seen as less aggressive,” surely a
comparative advantage in some circumstances but not in others. It
also stands in marked contrast to their image in Hong Kong, where
they are regarded as more aggressive and resourceful than, say, their
Indonesian competitors. Filipinas have a comparative advantage in
their ability to speak English and Spanish. Their Roman Catholicism
is also a benefit in Europe, particularly in Italy and Spain (Momsen,
1999).
Parreñas’ (2001) study of migrant Filipina domestic workers
in Rome and Los Angeles attempted to broaden the focus beyond
investigating domestic work as an occupational issue toward a more
comprehensive analysis of the institutional settings to which they are
responding. She, thus, viewed the workers’ experiences through the
lens of four key institutions of migration—the nation-state, family,
labor market, and the migrant community. Based on the women’s
stories that she collected, Parreñas analyzed her findings that ranged
from the politics of domestic work in the context of globalization to
the existential “dislocation of nonbelonging” that shapes the Filipinas’
interpretations of their own experience. A sense of “nonbelonging” or
isolation may be the greatest psychological challenge faced by those
who must work abroad.
Despite the superficial appearance of community conveyed by the
clusters of OFWs gathered in locations like Statue Square, Parreñas

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164 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
(2001) points out that such gatherings are actually isolated pockets—
so-called because the term pockets suggests a segregated social space,
in which social interactions are enclosed—reflecting the dispersion of
Filipinas for purposes of social control at scattered geographic sites
in the city. The groups of OFWs seen trudging up and down Garden
Road to St. Joseph’s Catholic Church or St. John’s Anglican Cathedral
indicate that the church, wherever and whenever Sunday services are
offered in either English or Tagalog is an example of such pocket. Like
all religious believers, migrant workers participate in such religious
rituals in order “to implore God to assist them in their temporal and
spiritual needs.”
While previous studies on Filipina domestic workers have
described the church as “a way station of some sort” (Mateo, 2003),
researchers generally seem incurious about what goes on in these
pockets formed under such conditions in a foreign country. When
viewed in the context of the isolation most experience in their
weekly work routines, however, regular church-attendance can be
understood as providing an important time and space for Filipino
women to establish their own support system and social networks
(Cheng, 1996). The gatherings, including regular church-attendance,
provide a valued opportunity for exchanging information and sharing
experiences, and overcoming their shared sense of “nonbelonging,” if
only for a few hours on Sunday.
But highlighting the social function of religion may only be the
tip of the iceberg, so to speak. While church-attendance is generally
the most visible and therefore most readily measured indication of
religious faith and practice, it should lead us to further inquiries into
what lies hidden beneath it. For example, to what extent do female
Filipino domestic workers turn to religion when they are not in
church, that is, when they are at work? Understanding what religion
may mean to them personally as well as socially should be a top
priority for researchers, given the challenges specific to the nature of
the work they do. Psychological studies of religion and its importance
in people’s lives have become more positive in their assessment in
recent years. If at one time, coping strategies based on religious faith
and practice tended to get dismissed as infantile, today spiritual
health is considered a vital aspect of one’s overall health, just as the
physical, intellectual, emotional, and social aspects of it are.
Nevertheless, the reassessment of religion’s positive contribution
to spiritual health does not entail an uncritical acceptance of all
forms of religious activity, social or personal. Turner et al. (1992), for

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example, have cautioned that while some people find deep spiritual
meaning in institutionalized religious practices, living by a set of
rules is not what spirituality is about. Spirituality should not be
confused with indicators measuring how often people attend church.
Regardless of religious affiliation, people who value spirituality seem
to share a faith that consists of certain experiences that they regard
as ultimately trustworthy: they believe that a power greater than
themselves exists; they believe that this power is omnipotent, in the
sense that it is in control of the universe and everyone’s lives within
it; and they believe that this power is good, cares for and loves them,
and controls and guides their lives according to their best interest
(Turner et al., 1992). Religious beliefs, as disseminated by religious
institutions like churches that build upon these experiences of basic
trust, name them, explain them, and teach people how to live more
consistently by them.
The ways in which common human experiences are identified as
religious, named and explained in religious beliefs, and reinforced
through participation in religious rituals is well known among
psychologists starting with William James whose Gifford Lectures,
published as The Varieties of Religious Experience6 (1902), is credited,
among other things, with initiating a genuinely scientific study of
religion. James’ empirical approach to the study of religious experience
broke with previous critics, such as Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud,
whose “hermeneutics of suspicion” (Ricoeur, 1977) seemed more
intent on explaining away religion rather than understanding it. A
similar trend can be seen in the development of anthropology, which
as it became more rigorously empirical eventually set aside post-
Enlightenment perspectives that dismissed religion as representative
of a “primitive” stage in the evolution of human civilization. While
such negative attitudes continue to influence the ways in which
some researchers ignore or underestimate the significance of religion
(Larson, 1995), anthropologist Clifford Geertz (1977) along with other
revisionists have made it possible to take a more positive view of
religion and its role in shaping cultures, and the social and personal
identities emergent in them.
In order to understand the observed complexity involved in
the ways religions actually function in human communities, Geertz
defined religion as a “cultural system”: “Religion is a system of symbols
which acts to establish powerful, pervasive and long-lasting moods
and motivations in [women and] men by formulating conceptions of
a general order of existence, and clothing these conceptions with such

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166 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
an aura of factuality that the moods and motivations seem uniquely
realistic” (1977, p. 87). This definition is not biased against the study
of religions in favor of one religious perspective or another, nor does
it focus on religious beliefs as if these were the most salient features of
religious experience. It provides instead a template for understanding
how religions develop and change, as religious people inherit them
and adapt them to the different challenges they face in life. It also
establishes a context for addressing philosophical questions about
the truth-claims of religion. The fact that religions are thought to
convey an ultimate truth about life is not to be dismissed as a sign
of irrationality or pathological insecurity, but as the normal result of
allowing religious symbols to shape one’s personal and social identity,
the practical results of which can be tested, revised, and renewed or
repudiated in light of one’s own experience. Religions continue to
shape their adherents’ perspectives on reality for pragmatic reasons:
in short, they work—or at least they work better than any other option
currently available to those who remain committed to them. It is
natural that, for those whose identities are shaped by them, religious
beliefs and practices are considered normal, if not uniquely realistic.
Not surprisingly, such positive reassessments of the general
significance of religion find their echoes in the studies of various
psychologists. Curran, for example, says there is no doubt that
religion or religious teachings play an important part in people’s lives
(1995). Consistent with Geertz’s perspective, sociologists use the term
religiosity to refer to the intensity of commitment of an individual or
group to a religious belief system. As to why religion is appealing,
the simplest explanation is that all religions, despite the tremendous
variation among them, respond to particular human needs (Curran,
1995). Even so, as psychiatrist David Servan-Schreiber points out,
however, spiritualities can be both healthy and unhealthy spirituality.
If prayer produces a state of calm, of love and a sense of belonging,
it has positive correlates to one’s health. But if spirituality reinforces
fear, self-loathing, and various anxieties, it is hardly conducive to
mental health (Power, 2003). Ellis (1995), for example, warns against
the fanaticism that often results from dogmatic religious devotion.
Such fanaticism, he says, is mentally and emotionally unhealthy.
Rather than rely on gross generalizations about religiosity and
mental health, more empirically oriented studies of what religion
means to people who take it seriously seem long overdue. Duke
University’s Harold Koenig, for example, suggests that further
research might consist in taking people’s “spiritual histories,” asking

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such questions as “Is religion a source of comfort or stress?” and
“Do you have any religious beliefs that would influence decision
making?” (Kalb, 2003). The investigations we are reporting here are
meant to respond to this constructive suggestion, and develop it
further in understanding the spiritual struggles of Filipina domestic
helpers. If Parreñas (2001) is right in characterizing domestic work
abroad as a “labor of sorrow” or a “labor of grief” because the
dislocations of migrant Filipina domestic workers involve the pain of
family separation, the experience contradictory class mobility, partial
citizenship, and the feeling of social exclusion or nonbelonging in the
migrant community, we need to know more about how religion has
enabled them to survive under such difficult conditions.

Theoretical Framework

In order to situate our research methodology in relationship to other


approaches, we find useful to start with Lee’s critical analysis (1996) of
the two previously dominant approaches to understanding migrants’
labor experiences: either a micro-level or a macro-level approach.
In the micro-level approach, the individual migrant worker is the
unit of analysis. Her human capital (individual characteristics such
as schooling, work experience, skills) and her motivations become
paramount in defining migration and her success or failure in the job
market. The structuralist macro approach, on the other hand, shifts
the inquiry toward explaining personal experience in terms of world
systems as in, for example, dependency theory. This theory has been
criticized for depicting an overly rigid scenario of class and status
divisions in an undifferentiated capitalistic labor market. But, as we
have already seen, the relationships between migrants and employers
are diverse and cannot be reduced to such a single-minded formula.
Alternative to both of these, Lee (1996) cites the work of Goss
and Lindquist (1995) as offering a more promising approach. Goss
and Lindquist seek to understand international migration in terms
of the moral agency of the workers. Their responses to the challenges
they face is best examined not as the result of individual motivations
and structural determinants, although these must play a role in any
explanation, but as the actions of agents with particular interests
who play specific roles within an institutional environment, drawing
knowledgeably upon sets of rules in order to increase their access to
resources.

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168 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK

Given the prominence of women in contemporary trends in


globalization, Lee (1996) also points out that the role of gender
as a fundamental basis for defining migration and labor market
experiences can no longer be neglected. Women’s moral agency and
how they choose to exercise it must be understood in terms of their
gender, a point that has been established philosophically by Gilligan
(1993) and personally observed in the USA by Ehrenreich (2001). While
the social, political, and cultural meanings of gender often operate to
women’s disadvantage, it is useful to remember that women can also
benefit from migration and work. Lee quotes Morokvasic (1984) in
support of the relevance of an agency approach to the investigation
of women’s employment and its impact on their lives: “…[M]igration
and incorporation of women in waged employment bring both
gains and losses … [W]omen can gain independence, respect, and
perhaps awareness that their condition is not fated and that it can be
changed.” The focus of this present study is to determine whether
and to what extent religion is a positive factor in the way Filipina
domestic helpers in Hong Kong discover and exercise their moral
agency, and thus overcome to whatever extent possible their fate as
victims of oppression.

Methodology and Findings

A 2005 study consisted of 122 brief interviews in Hong Kong among


randomly selected Filipina domestic helpers. This sought specific
information on their personal religious faith and practices. A
subsequent 2009 study consisted of 22 in-depth interviews, lasting
two hours each, 17 of which were conducted among the workers who
had taken refuge in the Bethune House shelter in Hong Kong operated
by the Mission for Migrant Workers. While the latter interviews were
focused on the question, “What makes you happy?” the answers
received also confirmed the importance of religious faith and practice
in the lives of those interviewed.

The 2005 Interviews

One hundred and twenty-two Filipina domestic helpers working


in Hong Kong were approached for an informal interview, in the
tradition of pakikipagsalamuha—or communion fellowship. That is,
the people who agreed to an interview recognized their common

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bond with the interviewers, who themselves were Filipinas with
either direct experience of or a sympathetic understanding of their
work. Three interviewers conducted the sessions between March 19
and April 5, 2005, usually on the Sundays in the parks of Hong Kong
where most Filipino domestic workers congregate when they have
their weekly day off.

Demographic Characteristics

Slightly over half of the respondents in this study (59.5%) are young
adults aged 35 years old and below with 16% of that number 25 years
old and below. About 30% of the group appeared to be those in middle
adulthood, which is significant in confirming what the literature
previously indicated regarding the fact that many of the Filipina
domestic helpers have families and children at home, whose needs
they are seeking to fulfill by working abroad. Among the women we
interviewed, almost half (48%) have been married, with five of these
indicating that they are separated and two are widowed. Nearly 40%
of the married women reported having children of their own in the
Philippines. Several of those who indicated that they are single also
reported having children to support.
As to their levels of education, the women reported facts that are
consistent with the findings of previous studies. Far from representing
the less educated elements in society, those who seek employment as
foreign domestic helpers report education achievements well above
the national average. Almost half of our respondents (about 40%) are
college graduates with an additional 30% having had some college
education. Only one of the respondents completed her education
with an elementary school diploma; on the other hand, only one
respondent had earned a Master’s degree.
Here is what was reported about their length of service in Hong
Kong: 63% of the respondents have spent between one and ten years
working there with about a quarter having been in Hong Kong less
than a year and about 14% over ten years. Restated in terms of the
number of two-year contracts they had fulfilled, slightly over half
the respondents (57%) have had only one or two contracts, 26% have
had three or four contracts, and the rest—a little over 20 %—have
completed contracts whose numbers range from five to 12. What
this suggests—consistent with previous studies—is that the Filipina
domestic helpers generally expect to work in Hong Kong for a limited
number of years, in order to fulfill specific economic objectives.

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170 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
Apparently they neither intend to stay in Hong Kong permanently,
or in any case, they have only rarely succeeded in doing so.
When asked about their wages in Hong Kong, the range reported
by our respondents was from HK$2,500 to HK$6,685 per month, with
vast majority (almost 80%), not surprisingly, receiving the standard
minimum allowable wage (MAW) of HK$3,270 per month. After
some political struggle, including street demonstrations, organized
by various groups of Filipina domestic helpers and their supporters,
in August 2010 the MAW was raised to HK$3,580 per month, with
a mandatory food allowance—when food is not provided for “free”
by their employers—of not less than HK$750 per month. Given the
increasingly high cost of living in Hong Kong, it is remarkable that
more than half of the respondents (60%) send between 41% and 80%
of their salary home to their families and an additional 7% sends home
between 81% and 100% of their salary. Conversely, only about 13%
of the respondents keep between 81% and 100% of their salaries for
themselves, a figure that is less likely to reflect a taste for luxury than
the incessant demands of their creditors, who often are able to have
their charges withheld from the workers’ wages before they receive
them. Our respondents’ reported success in sending remittances
home at such remarkably high rates is testimony not only to the heroic
sacrifices thus routinely make for their families, but also is consistent
with findings reported in previous studies7.
What, then, are the Filipina domestic helpers actually doing in
exchange for the wages they earn? Housekeeping tops the list of the
type of work done by respondents, followed closely by cooking and
laundry as well as childcare. A few of the respondents, less than 20,
also listed such work as elderly care, car wash, pet care, tutoring, and
marketing.

The Role of Religion in the Lives of Filipina Domestic Helpers

Our informants were asked the following questions: [1] What is a


religious person? What personal qualities do you identify as religious?
What practices do you think of as religious? [2] What image of God
emerges from your own experience? [3] Do you go to church or
participate in religious services? If so, how often do you go to church?
What do you get out of going to church? and [4] What do you pray
to God for?
According to our respondents, a religious person is first, one with
personal discipline, secondly, one who applies this discipline to life

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B.C. McCANN, M.H.U. ALVAREZ, AND D.P. McCANN 171
and its challenges, and third, one who engages in religious practices.
When asked to explain what they meant by personal discipline, they
tended to focus on outcomes, namely the personal characteristics that
they believe are cultivated in religious faith including such virtues
as humility, patience, open-mindedness, honesty and truthfulness,
selflessness, faith in God, God-fearing, loving, devoted, and
responsible. When further asked about the application that these
characteristics have in their lives, they gave the following responses:
communicates well with others, avoids committing crimes, does not
use vulgar language, is generous, is a peacemaker, and so on. Asked
to give examples of religious practices, they cited going to church,
attending Bible study, inviting others to attend church, and obeying
God’s commandments.
Responses to the question “What is the image of God that you keep
as you do your work here in Hong Kong?” fell into three categories:
God as omnipotent, God as omnipresent, and God as omniscient.
These terms, of course, are generalizations based on the concrete
images that our respondents put forward in their own way. A plurality
of them (close to 30%) viewed God as omnipotent—powerful above
all things, pinakadakila (“supreme”), tagapagligtas (“the Savior”), the
source of strength, the provider, and the protector. Another 24% of
the respondents viewed God as omniscient using images such as the
light, my guide, the One who has many plans for me. About 18%
then described God as omnipresent—God as spirit, father and friend,
kasama ko dito, (“the one who is with me here”), God is trust, He tries
me, everything to me, my anchor. Some of the respondents, less than
ten percent, indicated either both omnipotent and omnipresent or
both omnipotent and omniscient. A few responses, such as carpenter,
hardworking and “cannot be described” could not be placed in
any of these categories, although they are suggestive of theological
references to Jesus, on the one hand, and the sheer Otherness of God,
on the other.
When asked about their own participation in religious services,
only three respondents in the entire sample signified that they do not
attend church in Hong Kong. The vast majority of the one hundred
and eighteen who do attend church do so regularly, with 58% going
four times a month, and 22% three times a month. Most attend
Roman Catholic services because most (79%) of the respondents
were Roman Catholic—roughly parallel to the religious affiliation
reported for the Philippines as a whole—while the rest were a mix
of Methodist, Aglipayan—members of the Philippine Independent

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172 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
Church that was formed as a result of the Catholic church’s refusal to
bless the Philippine Revolution—and Charismatic group affiliations.
Respondents testified that they attend church because it gives
them inner peace and a sense of wholeness—for example, they feel
blessed, feel forgiven, feel new, find peace of mind or spiritual relief.
About 34% felt that going to church provides them with knowledge,
guidance, and inspiration—magandang aral (teaches good lesson,
edifies me), enlightens me, God’s word, a guide to living. Quite a few
(7%) indicated fellowship with God and with others—they feel close
to God, they feel at home, as one said, “I feel I have a home here.”
Other responses indicated that going to church is “more of a practice,”
an “opportunity to pray,” or the expression of a commitment to God.
When asked what they usually pray about while in Hong Kong,
over half (about 54%) have asked for “good health” for themselves
and for their families, but especially so that they may continue to
do their work. Many prayers (44%) have been for their families in
general—for God to take care of their families in their absence, for
their families’ well-being, and so on. Many (26%) have also asked for
peace—for themselves and their families, and for world peace—and
for comfort and strength (18%), guidance in solving work related
problems (17%), and personal safety (17%). Quite a number (23%)
have prayed for their employers—that they continue to be good—
and even for the Hong Kong economy. Other concerns (27%) were
very personal in nature, for example, prayers “for my youngest child
to find a job,” regarding “anything that affects my relationship with
Jehovah and Jesus,” “that my partner will marry me and give my son
his name,” “to get married soon.”
The interviews in this first set concluded by asking whether, in
addition to participating in religious services, the Filipina domestic
helpers had availed themselves of other, more concrete forms
of assistance, such as the programs at the Mission for Migrant
Workers. Only 23 respondents (less than 20%) indicated that they
had approached an organization for help in Hong Kong. Most of
the organizations approached were religious groups, though one
respondent said she had sought help from the Philippine consulate.
The fact that the assistance sought usually was for advice, as well
as the relatively low proportion seeking any assistance, suggests that
in general this group of respondents were confident of their own
resourcefulness—with the help of God—to meet the challenges they
face in Hong Kong.
In response to the final question “Now that you are working in

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Hong Kong, would you rather be in the Philippines?” the majority
(61%) said “No”, 30% said “Yes” and the rest either did not answer
(8%) the question or simply said “not sure” or “depends.” Low pay
in the Philippines was the number one reason why the respondents
(30%) preferred to stay in Hong Kong, followed by the lack of jobs
in the Philippines and the difficult life there (17%). However, they
would rather be in the Philippines if jobs were available (13%) in
order to be back with their families. Working as a domestic helper in
Hong Kong may be a difficult life, even for these respondents, but it
remains their best option so long as economic and social conditions
in the Philippines continue to work against them and their families.

The 2009 Interviews

While intended primarily as an in-depth elaboration of the earlier


study, the subsequent investigation also explored a question not
directly focused on the role of religion in their lives, but on the question
of how happiness is experienced, and to what extent it is possible,
even among the domestic helpers who have had an especially hard
time in Hong Kong8. Rather than a random sample, selected for
interview were women in residence at the Bethune House, sponsored
and managed by the Mission for Migrant Workers. These women,
13 of them Filipinas and five of them Indonesians, lived together in
a religiously diverse community at Bethune House. They had taken
shelter there so that they could pursue their options once they had
been fired by their employers or forced to break their employment
contracts. The contrast with the first set is evident in the fact that only
20% of that group had sought help—mostly in the form of advice—
from organizations like the Mission. While the respondents in this
second set roughly match the first set in demographics, in contrast
to the first set they were clearly in crisis over the difficulties they had
encountered. All the more remarkable, then, is their testimony to the
role of religion in sustaining their personal struggles to achieve their
goals and thus find happiness in Hong Kong.
The interviews were conducted primarily at Bethune House and
lasted for approximately one hour each. While they were focused
on two major questions: the informants’ work experience and their
perceptions regarding their own happiness, they also sought to
document the respondents’ personal information, their employment
history, and the specifics concerning their last employment situation
in Hong Kong. Most of the information about their religious faith and

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174 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
practices emerged from the way they chose to discuss the question
of their own happiness. In focusing on the question of happiness,
the intent was to collect enough information so that their responses
could be compared with the more generalized findings on happiness
reported by the World Values Survey and related national studies9.
There were roughly three groups of interviewees: 1) Group One,
consisting of Filipinas who have not had recourse to Bethune House,
2) Group Two, consisting of Filipinas who were currently sheltered at
Bethune House, and 3) Group Three, consisting of Indonesians who
were currently sheltered at Bethune House. Group One consisted
of four women working in Hong Kong as domestic helpers at that
time, two of whom had extensive work experience in other countries.
Group Two consisted of twelve Filipinas living at Bethune House,
plus one Filipina volunteer supervisor at Bethune House. Group
Three consisted of four Indonesians living at Bethune House, plus
one working in Macau while serving as a volunteer for Migrante
International, an organization affiliated with the Mission. Since the
focus of this study is primarily Group Two, Groups One and Three
served as reference groups for making comparisons in evaluating the
responses of Filipinas at Bethune House.

Demographic Characteristics

The Filipinas in Group One correspond roughly to the 30% of the


earlier study’s total who are over the age of 35. The average age in
Group One is 42, three of whom are married, and one married but
legally separated from her spouse. Three of the four were mothers, with
an average 3.3 children. As to religious affiliation, one is Protestant;
the other three are Catholic. Their levels of education, while not as
high as those reported in the earlier study, are well above average
for the Philippines as a whole: one attended high school through 3rd
year, two graduated from high school, and one was also a college
graduate. Thus the group as a whole has an average of 13 years of
formal education.
Group Two, corresponded roughly to the 59.5% of the earlier
study described as young adults, average age, 32.7. Six of 13 are
single, five currently married, one married but legally separated, and
one widowed. Eight of the 13 are mothers, with an average of 1.5
children. These figures are higher in the proportion of married with
children than what was reported in the first set of interviews. As to
religious affiliation, Group Two tracks consistently with both Group

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B.C. McCANN, M.H.U. ALVAREZ, AND D.P. McCANN 175
One and the earlier study: ten identify as Catholics, one as Aglipayan.
All 13 had graduated from high school, and two of these also were
college graduates, with an average of 13.9 years of formal education10.
Given the fact that their educational achievements are just as high as
those of Group One, education or a lack thereof cannot explain the
difficulties that prompted them to seek shelter at Bethune House.
The Indonesians (Group Three) are clearly comparable to the young
adult group described in the earlier study, with an average age of 28,
but their marital status is somewhat different in that one is single, one
is married but separated, and two are already divorced. The fact that
none is currently married may be indicative of a difference between
Indonesia and the Philippines, in terms of marriage and divorce law.
The Indonesians also report fewer children, with only two women
having given birth to one child each. As to religious identification,
all are Muslims, which makes the Bethune House unusual, if not
unique, in its success in fostering a community with such diversity
in religious orientation. The Indonesians all reported high levels of
education, even more dramatic in their contrast with the averages
reported for their sisters back home. While one attended high school
through the 11th grade before seeking employment, the other three
were high school graduates and one of these also a college graduate.
On average then Group Three reported 12.75 years formal education
among the four of them.
One of the areas in which information was requested concerned
work experience. In Group One, three of the four had previous
employment in the Philippines and had worked for an average of 4.5
employers overseas, for an average of 14.75 years. How this average
translates into number of contracts is unknown, since some of the
overseas employment occurred in venues outside of Hong Kong. While
none in this group had ever felt the need to take shelter at Bethune
House or similar institutions, they did testify to the problems that led
to the termination of their previous contracts: Four reported leaving
because of underpaid or unpaid wages, three because of overwork,
two because of illegal work, one because of sexual harassment,
one because of other disputes with employers, and two because
their employer had been relocated. The total number of incidents is
higher than the total number of responses since each had worked
for several employers over their careers as domestic helpers. Group
Two also reported previous employment in the Philippines, with ten
of the 13 having worked there before going overseas. On average
they reported 2.1 employers overseas with an average of 4.2 years

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176 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
working experience. Their reasons for leaving previous employers
indicate that despite their short careers, they had faced more extreme
difficulties than what was reported by Group One: While none of
them claim to have been harassed sexually, nine had been abused or
physically assaulted, three left because of underpaid or unpaid wages,
three because of illegal work, one because of overwork, five because
of other disputes with employers. Those who left but not because
of a negative experience with the employer included one because
the employer was relocated, one because of family needs at home,
one in order to start a business at home, and three simply because
the contract was successfully completed. In Group Three, three had
previous employment in Indonesia, with an average of two employers
overseas, and 4.2 years of employment overseas. Their reasons for
leaving previous employers, not surprisingly, paralleled the incidents
reported in Group Two: underpaid or unpaid wages, two; overwork,
one; illegal work, one, other disputes with employers, two; abused or
assaulted by employer, two; and one, because the contract had been
completed.

The Pursuit of Happiness among OFWs

In order to establish a baseline on their responses to other questions


about happiness, the respondents were asked to rate how happy they
felt on the day of the interview, on a scale of one through seven, with
one being “very unhappy,” and seven being “very happy.” Since this
question was not asked explicitly of the respondents in Group One,
their answers remain unknown; nevertheless, Group Two averaged
4.4 on this scale, and Group Three 4.0, which seem to suggest that,
despite the difficulties that led them there, they are generally content
with their situation at Bethune House.
Significant variations, however, began to emerge with the follow-
up question, on the same scale, asking them to rate their happiness
at [a] overseas job locations other than Hong Kong, [b] Hong Kong
job locations, [c] Bethune House. Group One’s responses were: [a]
overseas job locations: 2.75, [b] Hong Kong job locations: 4.17, [c]
Bethune House: N/A. Not surprisingly, given their success in Hong
Kong, they reported significantly greater average happiness there
than in previous overseas employment. Group Two’s responses were
just the opposite: [a] overseas job locations: 5.6, [b] Hong Kong job
locations: 2.9, [c] Bethune House: 5.6. This, too, is no surprise, given
the fact that they had recently left their employers under difficult

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B.C. McCANN, M.H.U. ALVAREZ, AND D.P. McCANN 177
circumstances, and considered themselves fortunate to have found
shelter at Bethune House. Group Three’s averages differ somewhat
from either of these: [a] overseas job locations: 2, [b] Hong Kong job
locations: 3.5, [c] Bethune House: 5. Despite their recent unhappy
experience, they still considered themselves happier in Hong Kong
than in previous overseas locations. The overall impression created
by these results is that happiness is situational. The Filipinas and their
Indonesian sisters are normal, healthy women, who are reasonably
content with their lot in life, so long as they are not exploited or
abused.
Finally they were asked to rate the highest source of happiness in
their lives. In response to the question, “We can summarize the things
that make you happy in terms of four categories: Family, Friends, God
(or Religion), and Work. Can you rank these in order of importance to
you?” The following report the average scores from each group: The
closer the score approximates to 1, the higher the factor rates as top
priority; the closer the score approximates to 4, the lower the factor
rates as top priority. Group One gave the following ratings: [a] Family
1.3, [b] Friends 4, [c] God (or Religion) 2, and [d] Work 2. For them,
family is their greatest source of happiness, followed by God and, not
surprisingly, their employment success. Group Two, consisting of the
Filipinas sheltered at Bethune House, gave the following ratings: [a]
Family 1.6, [b] Friends 3.75, [c] God (or Religion) 1.27, and [d] Work
2.72. God (or Religion), for Group Two, is even more important than
Family and Work. The Indonesian Muslims (Group Three) gave these
responses: [a] Family 2, [b] Friends 3, [c] God (or Religion) 1.8, and [d]
Work 2.6. God (or Religion) is their top priority with Family a close
second.

Experiencing God at Bethune House

Given what we have already learned from the first set of interviews
about the role of religion in the lives of Filipina domestic helpers in
Hong Kong, what else emerges from the second set, particularly from
Bethune House? When asked to explain their ratings, the respondents
typically understood God as their best friend. Given the routines of
a domestic helper’s daily life, prayer is both more informal and more
intense than it may have been at home in the Philippines. When asked
to describe her prayer life, one muses that she thinks of it as talking to
God, as intimately as a Filipino child talking with his “Lolo.” God is
“Diyos,” the Creator Spirit, the One to whom thanksgiving is due for

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178 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
all good things, the One with whom we can talk about our problems,
who can give us the strength to face the difficulties of the moment.
She prays to God in her tiny room, at the end of the day, in the lonely
hours when, exhausted from her daily chores, she becomes aware
once more of her separation from loved ones at home. Only one
person—a resident of Bethune House, who had recently experienced
some very hard times—said she thought God was punishing her for
her sins. None of those interviewed expressed morbid fears of God,
as if they felt like hiding themselves from Him. Only one informant,
an evangelical Protestant, had anything to say about a personal
relationship with Jesus Christ.
William James’ psychological observations about religious
experience may be useful here insofar as he made a diagnostic
distinction between “healthy-mindedness” and “the sick soul,” and
their corresponding religious expressions in the “once-born” and
“twice-born” religious personalities. The “twice-born” personality
is classically expressed in “born-again” or evangelical Christianity,
in which the primary focus is upon accepting Jesus Christ as one’s
personal savior in order to be saved by His Grace from one’s sins.
The “once-born” personality, however, is conscious of the presence of
God continuously in his or her life, and has rarely if ever, experienced
the feelings of alienation from God that make being “born-again”
seem so compelling to some. The Filipina domestic helpers’ thoughts
about God in their lives typically exhibit the characteristics of
“healthy-mindedness” and their intimacy with God through informal
prayer rather than the formulaic invocations of sin and grace seemed
convergent with the “once born” religiousness. Filipino Catholicism
encompasses both in its doctrines and practices; for that is part of
what it means to be “catholic.” But Catholics are typically selective in
what they take from their faith traditions, emphasizing some points
while ignoring others and relying upon what seems to work for them.
The respondents interviewed at Bethune House did not focus
on sin and guilt; they did not speculate on whether God was angry
with them; they did not interpret their struggles as indicative of a
questionable or shaky relationship with God. They seemed self-
confident about already living in the presence of God, and thus could
speak directly to Him simply and from the heart. They were not
particularly concerned about religious services or where they received
the sacraments of the church. While most claimed to regularly attend
church services, this does not mean that they go to mass every Sunday.
Indeed, a handful of them said they went to St. John’s Cathedral for

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B.C. McCANN, M.H.U. ALVAREZ, AND D.P. McCANN 179
mass, the Anglican church where the Mission for Migrant Workers
has its offices. At least one Catholic helper described participating in
evangelical prayer meetings organized for the Filipinas by Protestant
missionary organizations. While she had no intention of abandoning
her inherited Catholic faith, she felt that the prayer meetings were
helping her grow closer to God in her own way. The somewhat
broadminded approach to religious faith and practice evidenced
in their responses may also be testimony to the deep but unspoken
spirituality that unites all those sheltered at Bethune House, both
Christian and Muslim. At a time when in many parts of the world
there is so much hostility and mutual misunderstanding between
Christians and Muslims, Bethune House seems to offer a way forward
in which the reality of God can be affirmed without exacerbating the
divisions already existing among all His peoples.

Discussion

The interviews confirm that religious faith and practice form an


important part of the personal identities of Filipina domestic helpers,
and provide various ways of coping with the challenges involved in
their work in Hong Kong. The fact that nearly 80% of them report
going to church regularly and find positive spiritual support in
what they do there, also suggests that organized religious activities
in which they experience not only communion with God but also
solidarity with each other still define the core of their faith and
practice. The images of God reported by them, though categorized
in classical theological terms, signify that the self-discipline they
find in religion emerges from and flows toward a vivid personal
sense of God’s intimate presence in their lives, empowering and
sustaining them in their work. Nothing in their responses indicates
either superstitious reliance on a god to solve all their problems, or
an attachment to the traditional religious rituals for fear of provoking
the god’s anger against them. Our findings, therefore, confirm the
positive association between religion and mental health that other
researchers have observed, while also not reducing this association to
the vague appeal of individualistic forms of spirituality.
Magpakumbaba—a capacity for acting humbly or humility—is
often celebrated as a positive Filipino value. And yet this virtue exists
in tension with other Filipino values that honor education and teach
us to stand up for our rights. The resulting conflict in our state of

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180 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
mind does not automatically lead to positive results. Perhaps this
is why it is very important to create what has been referred to as a
“psychological safe space” (Kotani, 2004), something that exists both
in our inner world (that is, the intra-psychic or mental space) and in
the outer world of reality where our relationships with other people
play out. Recall Parreñas’ analysis of our need for “pockets” of social
space. Our interviews confirm that for Filipino women working
overseas, religion has become an important venue for the creation of
this protective pocket or safe space.
Curran (1995) was cited earlier as stating that all religions, despite
the tremendous variation among them, respond to particular human
needs. We believe that our findings help document the kind of
comfort and support that Filipina domestic workers in Hong Kong
have derived from their religious faith and practice, while living away
from their families in the Philippines. It is worth noting that it seems
only natural that these women turn to their churches and religious
organizations because almost all of them have Sunday—the day of
worship—as their day off from work. It is also true that precisely
because they are striving to save as much money as they can to send
home as remittances, that they will forego other, consumer oriented,
leisure time activities, in favor of gathering with their friends at
religious services. While the comfort and support provided by the
churches and religious organizations is primarily moral and spiritual,
we should not forget that there are economic and social benefits as
well. Indeed, for similar reasons, many if not all of the migration and
labor organizations also make themselves available to the workers on
Sundays.
Nevertheless, it is not so much the religious organizations that
are responsible for the domestic workers’ wellbeing as the spirituality
and religious faith of the workers themselves, who are changing
these organizations to fit their specific needs. The personal discipline
that they expect to find, and their participation in religious services
are the characteristics that they believe will ensure their success
in responding to the challenges of working overseas. In order to
overcome any challenges they face in Hong Kong, they recognize
their need to be faithful, God-fearing, honest, loving, open-minded,
truthful, and they hope to become more so because of their weekly
participation in religious services. By the same token, they expect God
to be powerful—a savior, provider, and protector—without whom
they are left to the tender mercies of an indifferent and often hostile
environment. That practically all of the respondents go to church

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B.C. McCANN, M.H.U. ALVAREZ, AND D.P. McCANN 181
regularly reflects and serves to renew the hopes and expectations that
they bring with them from home.
Thus the interviews confirm that the religious attitudes of the
Filipina domestic workers are actually very positive, optimistic, and
hopeful. They believe they find genuine comfort and support in
church attendance and prayerful fellowship. Their prayers tend to
focus on economic questions: they pray for good health and peace
as prerequisites to remaining in a foreign work setting. This is
understandable given that the reason that these women are working
abroad in the first place is to relieve the financial burdens on their
families. While their religious faith and practice can wave no magic
wand over their underlying hardship—loneliness, homesickness,
and their understandable anxieties over what may be happening to
those they have left at home—it still enables them to cope with the
hazards along the path they have chosen, far better than any of the
usual means of escape that Hong Kong has to offer.

Conclusion

Our findings are offered here in the hope of stimulating further
research on the role of religious faith and practice in the lives of
Filipina domestic helpers. There are several areas for further study.
One of these concerns is what, if any, transformative impact
carries over from the role religion plays in their Hong Kong lives
when the Filipinas return home, when they resume their duties,
perhaps as wives and mothers, perhaps as entrepreneurs, perhaps as
students returning to school in order to begin a new career. If the
Filipinas in Hong Kong seem to be unusually faithful in their church-
attendance and devout in their personal prayers, how does their
experience compare with the role religion plays in the lives of their
sisters at home? Our impression is that the experience of migration in
search of employment tends to intensify religious faith and practices
rather than undermine it. It is as if, before going overseas, workers
had access to an answer without knowing very well what questions it
addressed. Such an impression needs to be tested by further research.
What is the role that religious faith and practice actually plays in the
lives of women in the Philippines today? Does it change when some
of them go abroad in search of work? Once they return home, do
they maintain their level of religious participation, or do they revert
to whatever is considered normal among their families and friends?

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182 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
Another concern might focus further on research in comparative
studies of Filipina domestic helpers in other venues. In Hong Kong the
Filipinas form a highly visible community—at least on weekends—
where newcomers can readily find access to existing social networks
that will help them survive the challenges of living and working
abroad. But is Hong Kong an exception? Given the fact that the helpers
are part of the vast Filipino diaspora, with large numbers working in
the Middle East, in Europe, and in North America, the question is
whether religious faith and practice is as significant in these venues as
in Hong Kong? Are the churches and other religious organizations as
receptive to their needs as some of them are in Hong Kong? Does the
pocket of social space needed for mental health and spiritual renewal
shrink in these other venues? Does Filipina religiosity under such
circumstances become more intensely personal or does it fade away
altogether?
Given findings such as ours that emphasize the role of churches
and religious organizations in the lives of the Filipina domestic
helpers, further study and analysis should be focused on what
they are doing—or failing to do—to assist these women and their
families before, during, and after their working days overseas.
Are those contemplating going abroad for work finding adequate
counseling and support in their home parishes and congregations?
What, if anything, are churches and religious organizations doing
to prepare the workers for the cross-cultural challenges of working
in a foreign home, with employers who may know even less than
they do about the kinds of problems that can lead to a breakdown
in communication, and the likelihood of abuse? What, if anything,
are the churches and religious organizations doing to challenge the
predatory practices of some employment agencies—both in Hong
Kong and in the Philippines—whose chief aim seems to be to burden
the workers with impossible levels of debt? What, if anything, are
they doing to support the families of the Filipinas working overseas?
Have they, for example, sought to develop any pastoral strategies
specifically targeting the needs of the caretakers at home, particularly,
the husbands and fathers, who have been left to look after the children
while their mothers are away? What, if anything are they prepared to
do to assist the return and reintegration of the Filipinas, once their
contracts are completed?
Given our findings regarding the kinds of issues that occasion the
prayers of Filipina domestic helpers, we feel more needs to be done
by churches and religious organizations to provide concrete answers

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B.C. McCANN, M.H.U. ALVAREZ, AND D.P. McCANN 183
for them. As we have attempted to show, prayers can be overheard,
and when they are, it is up to everyone concerned to get involved.
Bethune House, which has made such an important difference in the
lives of domestic helpers in desperate circumstances, did not happen
miraculously. It is the result of hard work, hard lessons learned, and
a willingness of many to respond concretely to the prayers of their
sisters. Such efforts need to be multiplied, not only in Hong Kong,
but wherever Filipinas find themselves working abroad. In order to
make this possible, further research needs to be done on precisely
how the system of Filipina labor migration works, understanding
the challenges involved, identifying the institutional problems—on
the part of both the sending and receiving countries—that heighten
the risks of abuse, surveying the actual costs and benefits of such
employment, not just in financial terms, but also in psychological
and spiritual terms as well. We hope to encourage other researchers
to follow up on the tentative leads we believe our findings suggest,
particularly, in understanding and strengthening the role that
churches and religious organizations can play in supporting the
Filipina domestic helpers abroad.

ENDNOTES
1
For more information on the Mission for Migrant Workers, please consult its website:
http://www.migrants.net/.

2
For a survey of information available online regarding “Foreign Domestic Helpers”
in Hong Kong, see the Wikipedia article on this topic at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Foreign_domestic_helpers_in_Hong_Kong.

3
HKSAR Labour Department Public Support and Strategic Planning Document on
Foreign Domestic Helpers: http://www.labour.gov.hk/text/eng/plan/iwFDH.htm.

4
HKSAR Employment Contract for a Domestic Helper Recruited from Outside Hong
Kong—English Version: http://www.immd.gov.hk/ehtml/id407form.htm#SADD.

5
Foreign Domestic Helpers—Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs): http://www.immd.
gov.hk/ehtml/faq_fdh.htm.

6
William James (1842—1910) is an American philosopher who did pioneering work
in the field of psychology of religion. An online text of his classic, The Varieties of
Religious Experience (1902), along with many of James’ other works, is available at
http://www.des.emory.edu/mfp/james.html.

7
The total remittances from overseas workers to the Philippines in 2005 were US$10.7

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184 RELIGIOSITY AMONG FILIPINO DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HK
billion dollars, which ranked 3rd among nations worldwide, with only citizens of India
and Mexico sending home more. Figures are unavailable for the % of this total that
is sent by women working abroad as domestic helpers. Source: www.nationmaster.
com/graph/lab_wor_rem_rec_bop_cur_us-remittances-receipts-bop-current-us.

8
The full results of this second set were reported in an unpublished paper given at
the 46th Annual Convention of the Psychology Association of the Philippines (August
2009), “Are We Having Fun Yet?! Happiness and Strength of Character among
Filipina Domestic Helpers (OFWs) Living and Working in Hong Kong.” A copy of this
paper is available by request. Email [email protected].

9
Information on the World Values Survey, its methodology, and its findings
particularly on the question of happiness, and whether people’s attitudes toward it
or experience of it change under different circumstance is available at its website:
www.worldvaluessurvey.org/index_findings. The relatively high ranking reported
for the Philippines—in comparison with societies that rank higher in terms of
economic development—provoked quite a bit of controversy among Filipinos. Here
is one representative response: Alan C. Robles, “Happiness Viewpoint: It Doesn't
Take Much” Time, 20 February 2005. Source: www.time.com/time/magazine/
article/0,9171,1029896,00.html.

10
The significance of the educational achievements of the OFWs, as reported in our
first set and confirmed in the second, can hardly be overstated. According to statistics
issued by the World Bank and disseminated through the NationMaster.com website,
the average adult Filipino has completed 8.2 years of schooling, while the average
for 17 Filipinas interviewed for this study is 13.7 years. The 8.2 years earns the
Philippines 28th position in a field of 100 countries, which is quite impressive, given
that only Japan has a higher ranking among east and southeast Asian nations. The
Indonesians’ educational achievements are also worth noting: the 5 interviewed for
this study averaged 12.75 years, in comparison with their national average of 5 years
of schooling, ranking 66th worldwide. By comparison, the Nation Master statistics
indicate that the highest number of years of schooling among adults, predictably, was
reported was the USA’s average of 12 years. This means that the average domestic
helper interviewed for this project has achieved a higher level of formal education
than the average American. Statistical source: www.nationmaster.com/graph/edu_
ave_yea_of_sch_of_adu-education-average-years-schooling-adults.

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families in the new global economy. In B. Ehrenreich, & A.R. Hochschild. (Eds.).
Global woman: Nannies, maids, and sex workers in the new economy (pp. 39-
54). New York: Henry Holt.

Power, G. (2003, November 17). Learning to give thanks for life. Newsweek, 142, 20, 46.

Ricoeur, P. (1977). Freud and philosophy: An essay in interpretation. New Haven, CT:
Yale University Press.

Rivera, B. (2007, June 7). HK maids not happy with $10 pay increase. Retrieved from
www.globalnation.inquirer.net/news/breakingnews/view_article.php?article_
id=69982

Rimban, L. (1999). Filipina Diaspora. In C.C.C. Balgos. (Ed.). Her stories (pp. 127-
131). Quezon City: Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism.

Scalabrini Migration Center (2003-2004). Hearts apart: Migration in the eyes of


Filipino children. A research study by the Scalabrini Migration Center, Manila.
Available Online: www.smc.org.ph Retrieved on March 8, 2005.

Stiell, B., & England, K. (1999). Jamaican domestics, Filipina housekeepers and
English nannies: Representations of Toronto’s foreign domestic workers. In J.H.
Momsen. (Ed.). Gender, migration and domestic service (pp. 43-61). London:
Routledge.

Tam, V.C.W. (1999). Foreign domestic helpers in Hong Kong and their role in childcare
provision. Gender, migration and domestic service. London: Routledge, 263-276.

Turner, L.W., Sizer, F.S., Whitney, E.N., & Wilks, B.B. (1992). Life choices: Health
concepts and strategies (2nd ed.). New York: West.

Wolf, D.L. (2002). Family secrets: Transnational struggles among children of Filipino
immigrants. In F.V. Aguilar Jr. (Ed.). (2002). Filipinos in global migrations: At
home in the world? (pp. 347-379). Quezon City: Philippine Migration Research
Network and Philippine Social Science Council.

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READERS
FORUM
The Body Politic and Diaspora
in Theological Education:
An Introduction to the Conversation
with Lester J. Ruiz

Muriel Orevillo-Montenegro
Divinity School, Silliman University
Dumaguete, Philippines

A
ccreditation is crucial in shaping and setting the standards
of quality theological education, wherever they are located.
What has theological education got to do with the deplorable
situation of the marginalized and exploited people, like the domestic
helper in Hong Kong who looks at her life as metaphorically like
that of a roll of toilet paper? As director of the Accreditation and
Institutional Evaluation of North America’s Association of Theological
Schools (ATS), Lester Edwin J. Ruiz speaks of issues beyond the usual
categories outlined in an instrument of accreditation for theological
education. From his vantage point, Ruiz writes the essay “Recovering
the “Body Politic”: Racialized and Gendered Diaspora in Accredited
Graduate Theological Education.” It is notable that Ruiz is conscious
of his privileged social location as an Asian male in the U.S., and
that he heeds Focault’s caveat on the dangers and possibilities of
intellectual work—in production and reproduction of knowledge. In
this way, he is able to challenge the commonplace views and practices
of traditional theological education.
Ruiz treads into the path of looking at how theological education
in the U.S. performs “race” and “power” at the intersection of gender.
Quoting a lament from a domestic helper and Focault’s vision of
a criticism that awakens life as a prelude, Ruiz sets his agenda to
map out the elements of theological education that is crucial in the
description and evaluation of “race” and power. He seeks to explore

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192 READERS FORUM INTRODUCTION
metaphors useful in interpreting and rethinking “race” and “power”
towards social transformation. In doing this, he puts forth his desire
to engage in conversation with his audience on the question of how
“race” and “power” are interpreted and practiced, as well as their role
in shaping or (de)forming theological education.
Ruiz’s locus is the accredited graduate theological education in
the United States of America, and he focuses this desired conversation
on the metaphor of “body politic” in interpreting the practices of race
and power, particularly in situations of the “gendered Diaspora.” Yet,
his essay may still be used as a lens to examine the interpretation and
practices of race and power in theological education in the Philippines,
in wider Asia, and in other parts of the globe.
Steeped in the postmodern and postcolonial discourses, Ruiz
asserts one must not separate the notion of “the body” with the
“praxis” of responding to specific contexts. The root metaphor of
the “body”—as “political body”—informs one’s notion of “race”
and thus, it is crucial in understanding the problems of race and
power. He pointed out that we can learn from the way feminists
and women of color articulate their struggles in light of the question
of the “body,” of it being socially inscribed. Here, Ruiz also used
dance as an analogy to illustrate the body as an “inscribed surface of
events” that can be shaped with “racialized and gendered meanings,
appropriate behaviors, expectations, and standards or norms” such
as femininity, ethnicity, and “race.“ Women have retrieved the place
of the body in their struggles for the production and reproduction of
knowledge, and in surfacing subjugated, situated knowledge. These
women have re-claimed their subjectivity and spirituality that affirms
one’s experience of the self, the other, and of the Divine. Ruiz cites the
film Babette’s Feast as a metaphor for spirituality, and I add, of liturgy.
Furthermore, the feminist and womanists endeavored to retrieve
body politic in empowering practices.
Ruiz turns our attention further to a re-orientation of the
practices of race and power in the context of Diaspora, where the
latter is understood not only in terms of epistemic paradigm but
especially as a “way of being.” Here, he helps us to appreciate the
distinction of intersectionality from interstitiality and its bearing in
transforming a condition that drives people away from their homes
and becoming strangers not only in their own places but also in
foreign lands. In the experience of migrant Filipinos, Ruiz used the
metaphor of “turbulence” to understand the reality of estrangement
as encompassing movement and “disruptive, unpredictable, volative

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M.O. MONTENEGRO 193
speed.” Intertwined with the notion of body politic, (racialized and
gendered) Diaspora is forced not only to re-conceptualize the notions
of time and space and articulate their “homing desire,” but also to re-
invent themselves and their agency. To drive home his point, Ruiz cites
the condition of Asian and Asian-North Americans as example of the
racialized and gendered migration. He points to the phenomenon of
the emergence of new forms of identities and hybridities, of images of
borderlands and border crossings, as well as of de-territorializing and
re-territorializing projects and trajectories. Yet, these are accompanied
with nostalgia, of the longing for what Ruiz calls the “idyllic Garden
of Eden.” Diaspora disrupts the traditional system, as it forces us
to gaze at the Stranger, whose existence demands that new visions,
knowledge, possibilities, communities, and notions of hospitality
must be fashioned. In this context, Ruiz reminds his audience of
the role of language in Diaspora, and that is both “productive,
performative, and coercive” at the same time.
Against this backdrop, Ruiz notes that terminologies such as
“model minority,” “middle minority,” “forever foreigner,” and
“honorary white” have shaped Asian communities in North America
in negative ways. However, he admits that such stereotypes have
also provided the platform for resistance and development of new
identities and strategies for transformation. Noticeable in his essay
is the avoidance of the hyphen in his description of identities, e.g.
“Asian American” vis-à-vis “Asian-American.” Whether this is a
political posture, the audience is challenged to discern its implication.
He points to the development in the character of Asian American
theologies. The first generation Asian American theologies, he notes,
emerged as articulations grounded on struggles for social justice and
liberation from institutional and structural racism and discrimination,
in the midst of concerns on integration, autonomy, and the re-
invention of the Asian Christian identity. In contrast, the ranks of
second generation Asian American theologies have highlighted
interdisciplinary methods, and pay attention to culture, ethnicity,
gender, economy and interfaith and interreligious dialog. This is a
consequence of Asian North American theologians becoming wider
and diverse in terms of constituencies, fields of discipline, ecclesial
families, political and moral commitments and accountabilities. This
phenomenon points to the reality that one could not divorce the
“local” from the “global”; they are, as Ruiz notes, “co-constitutive.”
He further notes that the search for home, where home is not limited
to geography but is defined as “identities,” is crucial in charting the

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future of Asian and Asian American Christianity.
It is based on this definition that Ruiz made a baffling statement:
that “the many waves of Asian migrations and immigrations to the
U.S., in particular, is nothing more than the return of the colonized
to their homeland.” After all, Asian Christian’s identity is usually
inherited from, and aligned with the missionary group that inhabited
one’s homeland. Thus, he argues that the “point is not to return to the
old contestation about the American imperial and colonial project.”
Accreditation is a process of appraising the standard of theological
education according to the needs and contexts of the church
communities. Yet, Ruiz recognizes that these institutions tend to be
disconnected from these historic communities (the churches). He asks:
What are the conditions under which an authentically transformative
Christianity or religious identity and practice can be articulated?
What is the role of accredited graduate theological education in this
articulation? What, in the current practice of our learning, teaching,
and research, needs to be revisited in order to begin to address
the larger questions of what Asian American Christianity ought to
look like at the end of the mid-century? Subsequently, he outlines a
three-fold challenges brought about by the above “multi-stranded”
diversities, namely: how to understand the diverse locations and
practices, how may one link these diversities, and how to negotiate
the connections between plurality, the relations under uneven,
asymmetrical change in institutions. These, to Ruiz, are crucial issues
that affect the teaching-learning processes, considering that access to
power and privilege and the formation of the whole person are well
within the sphere of theological education.

“Theopolitics of (Re)Inscription”

In response to Lester J. Ruiz, karl james evasco-villarmea of Silliman


University wrote an essay “This Is My Body”: The Theopolitics of
(Re)Inscription. Now a doctoral student at Chicago Theological
Seminary, villarmea (who, for whatever political reason prefers his
name to be written all in small letters), hails Ruiz’s essay as speaking
to his location in an existential sense. For him, body talk is in a way
also a God-talk, and that it is inscribed at the very core of Christianity
as articulated in its christological formulation. Implicit in villarmea’s
view is the image of Jesus as a racialized and gendered person,
Jesus being a Jew and male. This male person was the embodiment

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M.O. MONTENEGRO 195
of the violated divine, vulnerable and whose body was “subjected
to constraint and power” and was buried. He sees the challenge of
recovering the body at a time when it is regarded merely as a means to
glorify capital. Highlighting the connection of divinity and materiality
in the body, villarmea argues that breaking such nexus will yield
a catastrophe leading to death. He understands Ruiz to be calling
for an ontological-epistemological position that demands political
and ethical task of reconfiguring “body politic” such as theological
education. However, villarmea is not convinced of its necessity to be
“framed ecclesiastically.”
Bringing home the implications of the matter, villarmea turns
our gaze towards a “window” that may be useful for Silliman
University’s faculty. He notes that Ruiz’s article raises crucial and
critical pedagogical questions for educators located in a country
that is economically propped up by diaspora—the migrant workers.
He asks fellow Filipino educators, especially those at Silliman: how
do we produce knowledge? What is the basis of such production
and reproduction? And to what (or whom) does this serve? These
questions are not simply rhetorical and theoretical; instead, they
point to the status and existence of the body in light of the Philippine
government’s promotion of vocational education to export bodies as
overseas workers.
An institution’s response, such as Silliman’s, will reveal its
commitment to the foundational faith-tradition upon which it is
supposed to stand. Does Silliman education enable students to see
and live the messianic mission (the via, veritas, vita) of Jesus? Does
it seek explicitly to contribute to the fundamental transformation of
the social order? Does it bring out knowledge that welcomes without
condition? Does it cultivate commitment in students to serve the least
among us? Or, is Silliman education girded only towards serving the
(neo)liberal state and work for the global capitalist market? These
questions do not make us go back to the timeworn ideological debate,
villarmea opines. Instead, these provocative inquiries make us think
about what it means to create a more humane society, and it enables
us to open up our human vista that we may propel our country
towards a more democratic society.

Graduate Theological Education in and for Diaspora

From a white male who married a Filipina, Dennis P. McCann of Agnes

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Scott College in Decatur, Georgia finds Ruiz’s article important for
people who have “risked becoming strangers in a strange land.” In
his response to Lester J. Ruiz’s article entitled “Graduate Theological
Education in and for a (Racialized and Gendered) Diaspora,” McCann
sees the essay as an assessment of diverse experiences of Filipinos
who become “members of a globalized and globalizing Diaspora
community.”
McCann traces the history of the term Diaspora back to the biblical
studies, where the Jewish diaspora is regarded as vehicle for the spread
of Christianity around the Mediterranean, beginning especially with
Paul’s missionary journeys. Ruiz’s “anti-essentialist” approach to
Diaspora has roots in Jesus’ “refusal to retreat into lofty abstraction,”
he notes. Christian churches are in reality Diaspora communities
that need to understand the meaning of being Diaspora, and this is
implicit in Ruiz’ discourse on graduate theological education.
Challenged by Ruiz’s admission of his social status, McCann
acknowledges his being a privileged American male “bonded by
marriage to the fate of the Filipino people and their beloved islands.”
Ruiz awakened the subversive memory of his Irish Catholic roots, and
thus he resonates with Ruiz’s effort to theologize through the eyes of
Filipino Diaspora. He sees a parallel in the situation that drove the
Irish to become Diaspora two centuries ago with that of the Filipino
situation today. There was lack of economic and social opportunity
for advancement, and sense of oppression at “the hands of colonial
and neocolonial masters.” Or, perhaps it was yielding to the call for
adventure, or both.
However, McCann is wary that the complexity of Diaspora
experience is not fully acknowledged, for the postmodern language
highlights only the notions of “estrangement” and the “turbulence”
brought about by the dispersal and dislocations from original
locations. Although Ruiz sees “estrangement” as not only about
victimization but also an opening towards a new door for moral
agency and responsibility, McCann wants to go beyond Ruiz. He finds
that Ruiz did not take into account the sense that “estrangement”
also “begins at home.” McCann asks many questions about the
conditions at home that drives people to become Diaspora. Informed
by his own interviews of Filipina domestic workers in Hong Kong,
McCann argues that a “truly critical reassessment of their (racialized
and gendered) Diaspora experiences will not be complete until the
social and economic injustices by which some Filipinos prosper by
oppressing their neighbors is fully addressed.” McCann proffers that

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M.O. MONTENEGRO 197
Ruiz misses to address these concerns effectively because of his refusal
to view Diaspora in “outmoded binary forms of analysis.” Yet, a streak
of hope McCann finds in Ruiz’s work. It is about the religio-moral
response to Diaspora event: hospitality. In this vein, McCann cites the
example of Bethune House and the Mission for Migrant Workers that
welcome not only Filipino domestic helpers but also women from
other countries and of various faith and religious traditions. Here,
Diaspora space is “joyfully and generously shared,” among a “new
kind of religious community in the Diaspora, one that is ecumenical
and interfaith from the ground up.” He observes that it has become
a “harbinger of hope,” so that it could effectively mobilize political
movements among Hong Kong Diaspora. Filipina migrant workers
even become more religious in Hong Kong. McCann wonders what
happens to the new “Subjectivity” when these Filipinas come home.
What will their Diaspora experience mean for the churches of the
Philippines and their role in the nation’s public life?
McCann thinks it may be easier for Ruiz to advocate for a
(racialized and gendered) Diaspora consciousness in the U.S.A. than
getting a “respectful hearing” for such proposals from the churches in
the Philippines. He thinks the transformation of graduate theological
education in the Philippines needs given top priority, rather than
the Asian-American context. He notes a general lack of interest in
religious traditions other than one’s own in the discourse of Ruiz:
he is too focused on his ATS constituency that he has neglected the
presence of Roman Catholic theological education. He believes one
could not afford to relegate to the margins possibilities for ecumenical
and interfaith collaboration in the struggles for social justice and
human authenticity. He believes, though, that Ruiz agrees with him
on this matter.

Is Integral Liberation in Theological Education


Possible?

Mark Lewis Taylor, professor of Theology and Culture at Princeton


Theological Seminary asks: “Integral Liberation in U.S. theological
Education: Is it Possible?” Being immersed also in contemporary
theory, Taylor commended Ruiz for his matrix of theory (or should
I say, theories) in his advocacy for racial and gender justice in North
American institutions, particularly theological education. He notes
that concerns for justice and liberation are usually done with “a

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198 READERS FORUM INTRODUCTION
hermeneutics of outrage and denunciation,” without the benefit of
theoretical mediation. Taylor works on the thesis that theological
education in the U.S. is “still far from what it can and should be when
it comes to both teaching and practicing racial and gender justice,” and
this is definitely related with the “pervasive neocolonial and imperial
posture of Christian religion in the U.S.” However, radical advocacy
for justice and liberation in theological institutions demands cautious
reflections for it not to fall into the pit of naïve progressivism and
Left-posturing.
Taylor’s response to Ruiz is set in three points. He stresses on the
issue of the constructed character of race to show that it still props up
the male subject-position in US theological education, and that race
is still at the core of US imperial formation. He puts forth the notion
of “integral liberation” as his way of characterizing the “authentic
and transformative Christian faith.” This is his response to Ruiz’s
key question: what is an “authentically transformative Christianity?”
Then, he discusses his view of what US theological education needs
to become.
Having experienced difficulty in teaching the view that racism is
a construct, Taylor thinks that Howard Winant’s definition of racism
is helpful; that it is “the routinized outcome of practices that create
or reproduce hierarchical social structures based on essentialized racial
categories.”1 While U.S. higher education in theology often likes to see
itself as champion of academic freedom, in reality it is still stuck as
controlled spaces when it comes to the issues of gender and race.
Theological education is ordered by the ideals of the “canons of
scholarship” and by particular interpretations of those ideals that
come with entitlements and privileges. Taylor directs our attention
to the figures from the ATS compilation concerning race and gender
in theological education. Across the board, white males are still the
dominant group among students and faculty. The women are still
below fifty percent. Yet, at the faculty level, Taylor notes that the
“disparities of gender and racial/ethnic profiles” are more strongly
noticed, especially among the tenured. There are few women, and
white males still dominate in faculty and top administrative levels.
Taylor points that the rhetoric of “diversity” in theological education
is “severely limited” when empowerment for the marginalized is
excluded. Considering the number of whites in theological education
“together with and compounded by their holding greater numbers of the
power-holding positions, US higher education still has a long way
off from what it should be.” Furthermore, theological education is

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M.O. MONTENEGRO 199
only one of the US academic institutions that fails to challenge the US
hegemony, and even gives face and justification for such hegemony.
Taylor rightly demurred Ruiz’s view not to revisit the “old
contestation about the American imperial and colonial project”
precisely because the US imperial and colonial project continues
to reconstitute and re-invent itself. Protesting such project also
continues to be necessary and relevant. Taylor asserts that racialized
and gendered constructs have serious political and economic
consequences.
The questions Ruiz asks presupposes a clear view of what
an “authentically transformative Christianity” means. Instead,
Taylor prefers the concept of “integral “liberation,” one that was
developed by Third World theologian, Gustavo Gutièrrez. This
concept articulates a wholistic approach to community survival in
the struggle for social liberation of the exploited groups around the
world. To Taylor, this term names the flourishing and differentiated
event of liberation, the event that is the goal of all struggles; visioning
and commitment are made. Integral liberation is also “reconciliatory
liberation,” and thus the world “reconciliatory” should be taken as
qualifier of liberation that must also be kept fluid even as it is open
and aware of the various types of liberation that people need. Integral
to liberation is the pursuit of justice that is qualified by love. Taylor
takes this as the “hallmark of Christian being in the world.” A stress
on racial and gender justice is informed by Taylor’s reading of the
biblical narratives in a “counter-imperial frame.” This reminds the
reader that the early Jesus movement emerged with teachings on life
and spirit in the context of Roman imperial power and formation. Yet,
the Euro-American scholars have marginalized and de-politicized
these teachings. Retrieval of the counter-imperial faith is necessary for
the church to be “paradoxically, faithful to the way of the cross and
the rising of Jesus.” Taylor rightly stressed that this counter-imperial
faith thrived usually in marginalized and oppressed Christian
communities.
Taylor suggests five areas of theological education in the U.S.
needing attention towards transformation:

1. There is a need to end the hegemony of European and U.S.


white and male subject-positions in US theological education.
2. The issue of the US imperial and US colonial—both as past
legacy and present structuring reality—needs to be taken more
seriously than they are at present in theological education.

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200 READERS FORUM INTRODUCTION
3. The gospel of liberation should be taught in our seminaries,
and elsewhere, as a complex phenomenon, one that demands
the best of theoretical analysis, as well as outrage over injustice
and exclusion.
4. Growing out of liberation thought’s necessary complexity,
our discourses about the US imperial in a gospel of liberation
should move beyond traditional Left language, which focuses
largely on issues of powerful US military brinkmanship,
nationalism or transnational class dynamics, and often less on
how constructs of race, class and gender also constitute and
strengthen the US imperial.
5. To conclude with practical comments on the institutional
enforcement of all this, the agencies that accredit theological
institutions in North America need to more vigorously
withhold accreditation and impose citations on especially the
most powerful schools.

Yet, Taylor asks: who will dare to utter these words, and
seek to implement them? Who among us will support such an
implementation? Ruiz have boldly analyzed and brought before
us the issues of racial and gender injustice especially in theological
education. For him, failing to do so is tantamount to being “ashamed
of the gospel of liberation.”

ENDNOTE
1
Howard Winant, The New Politics of Race: Globalism, Difference, Justice
(Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2004), 126.

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Recovering the “Body Politic”:
Racialized and Gendered Diaspora
in Accredited Graduate
Theological Education1

Lester Edwin J. Ruiz, Ph.D.

“What has WTO got to do with your being a domestic helper?” Almost indignantly
she replies: “Don’t you know that I am a product of this WTO? I never dreamed I
would end up a domestic helper in Hong Kong. I had to leave my family because the
salary I earned back home would not allow me and my family to live decently. I’ve
been here for more than six years now. I want to return home but I cannot. No job
awaits me there... Each time I try to start saving (part of my salary), the price of oil at
home rises. I am stuck. I am a stock….”
Turning to a migrant advocate, she said, “Di ba, Ate? Para akong toilet paper
sa tindahan? Kung mabili ka, okay. Kung hindi, diyan ka lang. At pag nabili ka naman,
pagkagamit sa iyo, tapon ka na lang. Hindi ka naman kinukupkop. [Is it not true, Big Sister
that I am like a roll of toilet paper in a store? If I am not sold, I remain on the shelf; if
someone buys me, I get used up and thrown away afterwards. I am not cared for…]”

Cynthia Caridad R. Abdon


The GATS and Migrant Workers’ Rights:
Impacts on and Alternatives from Women
Panel presentation at the
Ecumenical Women’s Forum on Life-Promoting Trade
12-14 December 2005
Hong Kong

“I can’t help but dream about a kind of criticism that would try not to judge but to
bring an oeuvre, a book, a sentence, an idea to life; it would light fires, watch the
grass grow, listen to the wind, and catch the sea foam in the breeze and scatter it. It
would multiply not judgments but signs of existence; it would summon them from
their sleep. Perhaps, it would invent them sometimes—all the better… Criticism that
hands down sentences sends me to sleep; I’d like a criticism of scintillating leaps

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202 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
of the imagination. It would not be sovereign or dressed in red. It would bear the
lightning of possible storms.”

Michel Foucault
“The Masked Philosopher”
Interview conducted on 6-7 April 1980 by Christian Delacampagne,
reprinted in Michel Foucault, Ethics Subjectivity and Truth:
Essential Works of Foucault 1954-1984, Volume I, edited by Paul Rabinow
(New York, NY: The New Press, 1997)
p. 323.

My agenda

W
hat I hope to achieve in this essay is at least three things: first,
to create a map, not about the disciplinary fields in which
“race” and “power” are often formally located, but a map
that identifies those elements which, while not directly about “race”
and power, may be critical to their description and evaluation; second,
to offer some interpretive metaphors that might allow improvisation
in how “race” and power especially at their intersections can be “re-
thought” for the purpose of fundamental change2; and, third, to enter
into that ongoing, vital conversation among the readers of this journal
about how the signifying practices of “race” and “power” help (de)
form accredited graduate theological education3 in the US.
However, I want to accomplish these tasks with the recognition
that the intellectual production, reproduction, and representation, in
which I am engaged, despite their aspirations towards transformation,
are still the discourse of a privileged Asian male in the US. As Foucault
reminds us, because all intellectual work is a passage through
privilege, it is fraught with both dangers and possibilities: dangers,
because we are a species marked, not only by reason, or by freedom,
but also by error; possibilities because the history of thought, read as a
critical philosophy appreciative of “fallibility,” can become a “history
of trials, an open-ended history of multiple visions and revisions,
some more enduring than others.”4
Therefore, the need for self-critical accountability, which begins
with the acknowledgement of location and positionality, not to
mention maneuver, is a spiritual, methodological, and political
necessity. It helps to [1] frame the production and reproduction
of knowledge as a passage to transformation—the creation of the
fundamentally new which is also fundamentally better in the context

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L.E.J. RUIZ 203
of conflict and collaboration, continuity and change, and the creation
of justice5; and [2] define the appropriate roles that producers and
reproducers of this kind of knowledge can play in society, particularly
in the context of those for whom and for what purpose knowledge is
produced6. As Foucault notes:

The work of an intellectual is not to shape the other’s political will; it is, through
the analysis that he carries out in his field, to question over and over again what
is postulated as self-evident, to disturb peoples’ mental habits, the way they do
and think things, to dissipate what is familiar and accepted, to reexamine rules
and institutions and on the basis of this re-problematization… to participate in the
formation of a political will (in which he has his role as a citizen to play).7

Focusing the conversation

One way to focus the conversation about the practices of “race” and
power is to ask the question, “What might be learned about the
practices of “race” and power by re-locating them in the context of the
“pursuit of the body politic” especially under conditions of (racialized
and gendered) Diaspora?”8
Are there grounds, in fact, to transpose the question of “race”
and power to questions of “the body”? In an intentionally textured,
highly nuanced essay entitled “Navigating the Topology of Race,”
Jayne Chong-Soon Lee, affirms Kwame Anthony Appiah’s relentless
and uncompromising challenge to the “uncritical use of biological
and essential conceptions of race as premises of antiracist struggles”
and acknowledges that “the term ‘race’ may be so historically and
socially overdetermined that it is beyond rehabilitation.”9 At the
same time, she is convinced, along with Ronald Takaki, that racial
experience is both quantitatively and qualitatively different from
ethnic experience; and that, therefore, Kwame Appiah’s preference
for “ethnicity” or “cultural identity” to refer to the structures and
processes of “race,” fails

to account for the centrality of race in the histories of oppressed groups… and
underestimates the degree to which traditional notions of race have shaped, and
continue to shape, the societies in which we live (p. 443)

In this context, Chong-Soon Lee concludes not only that “race as


ethnicity may actually hinder our ability to resist entrenched forms
of racism,”10 but that “race” as a creature irreducible to “ethnicity”

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204 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
is needed in order to understand, for example, that colonialism,
say in Africa, as an expression of imperialism, is both about racial
domination and cultural oppression. For this reason, Kwame Appiah’s
abandonment of “race” in favor of “ethnicity” or “culture” may be
both flawed and premature.
More important, drawing on the work of Michael Omi and
Howard A. Winant which deploys the term “racialization” to signify
“the extension of racial meaning to a previously racially unclassified
relationship, social practice or group,” thereby underscoring the
“contingent and changing nature of race and racism while recognizing
its pervasive and systematic effect on our history,” Chong-Soon
Lee argues that there can be no homogenous or unitary notion of
“race” and that its meaning will, of necessity, arise not only out of
its multistranded contexts but also will have multiple accounts:
biological, social, cultural, essential, and political.11
This abbreviated, admittedly oversimplified, summary of Chong-
Soon Lee’s narrative about the nature of “race” and ethnicity or
cultural identity is interesting for several reasons. First, it clearly
describes the fundamental divide between the proponents of “race
as social construction” and the proponents of “race as biology” that
continues to cast its long, if epistemologically-flawed shadow on
present-day discourses on “race.” Second, and probably more directly
relevant to the agenda of this essay, it suggests that the discussion
on “race” cannot be extricated from socio-historical and physicalist
considerations of “the body” precisely because such “ontological
differences” rely on racialized physical and morphological traits.
Third, it points to ongoing discussions, say in the work of Omi and
Winant that the very notion of “race” not only continues to change
over time, but also that “race” may be more productively understood
by its effects rather than its definitions.12

The Pursuit of the “Body Politic”: Root Metaphor for Interpreting


the Practices of “Race” and Power

In fact, what this discussion does suggest that at the center of particular
discourses on “race,” especially in the US, one finds not only a notion
of “the body,” but also a particular interpretation of that body which
shapes the very practices of “race” to which it is attached. Here, we
are dealing not only with “the body” as an epistemic paradigm, but
also with what Aristotle called praxis, i.e., a practical activity that
addresses specific problems which arise in particular situations. Until

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L.E.J. RUIZ 205
we find our way through to the root metaphor of that “body” that
informs our notions of “race,” it will be almost impossible to deal
comprehensively and adequately with the problems of “race” and
power.13 Perhaps, more important, because this “body” is a “practical
activity,” it cannot be anything other than a “political body.” And
because the question of “race” and power, noted earlier, is articulated
at the contested interstices of personal, political, historical, and sacred
life, it essentially and strategically becomes a political struggle to
rediscover or re-constitute, if not re-assert, the importance of the “body
politic,” much in the same way that some women have articulated
their struggles around questions of “their bodies” in political life.”14

What Can We Learn About “The Body” From These Struggles?

In the first place, feminist and womanist struggles to recover the place
of the body in political life involve different ways of producing and
reproducing knowledge (epistemology), affirming the connections
among situated knowledge, partial perspectives, and subjugated and
insurrectionary knowledge and agents of knowledge. Such struggles
have consistently focused, among other things, on the necessity, if not
desirability, of rethinking the relationship between reason and desire
and the construction of conceptual models that demonstrate the
mutually constitutive rather than oppositional relationship between
them.15 On face value, this may be a straightforward, even simplistic,
if not obvious, statement about the nature of knowledge—and the
bodies that produce and reproduce them. However, when one
understands that these claims are set in the context of the historical
pretensions about the universality of (masculinist) reason as opposed
to say, feminist desire, and of the reality that the latter is associated
with subordinate groups—particularly women—and deployed to
discount and silence those realities deemed to be incongruous with
(masculinist) reason, then one begins to realize how these new
epistemologies actually explode patriarchal myths about knowledge
in political life16 and assert that bodies are constituted by both reason
and desire, matter, and spirit.
In the second place, feminist and womanist struggles to recover
the place of the body in political life involve different modes of being
(ontology), insisting, not only that thinking, feeling, and acting are
relational practices, but also that bodies are more than (passive)
biological objects; that they are, in fact, “volatile bodies” that can be
re-figured and re-inscribed, and that move through and beyond the

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206 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
conventional divide—not unlike the divide on “race” noted earlier
in this essay—of gender as socially-constructed, on the one hand,
and of sex as biologically-given, on the other hand, to “our bodies
ourselves.” Elisabeth Grosz already suggested over a decade ago,
that the “male (or female) body can no longer be regarded as a fixed,
concrete substance, a pre-cultural given. It has a determinate form
only by being socially inscribed.”17 As a socio-historical ‘object’, she
continues,

the body can no longer be confined to biological determinants, to an immanent


‘factitious’, or unchanging social status. It is a political object par excellence; its
forms, capacities, behaviours, gestures, movements, potential are primary objects of
political contestation. As a political object, the body is not inert or fixed. It is pliable
and plastic material, which is capable of being formed and organized.18

Thus, as an “inscribed surface of events,”19 the body as both


palimpsest and apparatus becomes malleable and alterable, its surface
inscribed with racialized and gendered meanings, appropriate
behaviors, expectations, and standards or norms, for example, of
femininity, ethnicity, and “race.” The “body politic,” then, as a site
of politics, is not only about “who gets what, when, where, and
how” (politics as distribution) but also that the “what, when, where,
and how” are inscribed—written on, embodied in—our very bodies
(politics as inscription).
The example of Latin and ballroom dancing is another illustration
of what I understand by the “body.” Dancers know that the dance
floor, and I would say, the ceiling, are constitutive elements of the
dance, along with the beat of the music (to which most dance) and
the melody of the music (to which the best of the best dance). Latin
dancing, and its characteristic “Cuban motion” is achieved by one
pressing from the waist down into the floor—actually, one of the reasons
for the sensuous, earthy intensities of Latin movement. In contrast,
the gliding, soaring, almost ethereal, movement of the ballroom waltz
or foxtrot, is accomplished, in part, by stretching one’s body toward
the ceiling. Both floor and ceiling are, in this sense, constitutive of the
dance, in the same manner that heaven and earth are constitutive of
human life. To put the matter rather starkly, ceiling and floor are part
of the dancers’ bodies.
In the third place, feminist and womanist struggles to recover
the place of the body in political life involve different forms of
“consciousness” (subjectivity), not only acknowledging that
consciousness arises out of concrete and sensuous reality but also

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L.E.J. RUIZ 207
that subjectivity itself is performative, i.e., it exists only when it is
exercised or put into action—hence, its relational character; and that
spirituality (or matters of spirit) are always and already embodied
experience. If it is true that human beings are more than logos but
also eros, pathos, and the daimon, then consciousness and the structure
of subjectivity that accompanies it would have to include touching,
feeling, smelling, tasting, eating. Theoretically put, consciousness,
subjectivity, and, spirituality, refuse, on the one hand, the temptation
of a disembodied transcendence, and, on the other hand, reject their
articulation as a totalized immanence. To say that “spirituality” is
about “touching, feeling, smelling, tasting, eating” is to acknowledge,
not only the inadequacies of the received traditions of “spirituality,”
but to affirm that this “spirituality” is about a peoples’ concrete and
sensuous experience of self, other, and, for the religiously inclined,
of God. “Babette’s Feast” may very well be the metaphor for such
spirituality.20
In the fourth place, feminist and womanist struggles to recover the
place of the body in political life involve different empowering practices
(politics), recognizing not only the importance of self-definition and
self-valuation, or of the significance of self-reliance and autonomy,
but also the necessity of transformation and transgression, and of
finding shared safe places and clear voices in the midst of difference,
particularly where the asymmetries of power are mediated through
structures and processes that legitimize or naturalize some differences
and not others.21
In fact, what contemporary feminist and womanist struggles
have contributed to our understanding of the “body politic” is
a mode of discourse that interprets, describes, and evaluates the
complex and interdependent relationships among theory, history,
and struggle, focusing on the intricate and intimate connections
between systemic and personal relationships, and the directionalities
of power. In developing her political analytic, for example, Dorothy
Smith introduces the concept of “relations of ruling” where forms
of knowledge and organized practices and institutions, as well as
questions of consciousness, experience, and agency, are continuously
fore grounded. Rather than positing a simple relation, say between
colonizer and colonized, capitalist and worker, male and female, this
perspective posits “multiple intersections of structures of power and
emphasizes the process or form of ruling, not the frozen embodiment
of it.”22
Feminist and womanist struggles, in their insistence on a

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208 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
thoroughly relational and intersectional understanding of knowledge,
being, subjectivity, and politics, have demonstrated that such notions
as “race,” gender, class, nationality, and sexuality—formative
elements of the “body politic”—are not only “simultaneously
subjective, structural and about social positioning and everyday
practices,” but are re-inscriptions of the very meaning and substance
of the “body politic” itself.23 Thus, it may be desirable, if not wise, not
only to insist on but to follow, the migrations of “race” and power
from their origins hinted above into their intersections with other
elements in order to arrive at a more adequate understanding of their
effects.

Re-orienting the practices of


“race” and power

Diaspora and Estrangement: Contexts for the Practices of “Race”


and Power

The practices of “race” and power have not always been associated
with the realities of (racialized and gendered) Diaspora. However,
with the exponential growth of processes of profound structural
transformation that have gained some level of autonomy at the
global level and which sustain—often with displacement and
dislocating effects—the movements and flows of capital, people,
goods, information, and ideas and images, the concept of Diaspora,
Avta Brah and Ann Phoenix observed, has been “increasingly used in
analyzing the mobility of peoples, commodities, capital and cultures
in the context of globalization and transnationalism.”24 In fact, Brah’s
Cartographies of Diaspora, explored at great length and with care as
early as 1996 the intersectionalities of “race,” gender, class, sexuality,
ethnicity, generation, and nationalism including both productive
and coercive forms of power across multiple spatial and temporal
locations and positionalities.25
While deeply appreciative of Brah’s and Phoenix’s epistemic and
strategic challenge to the more conventional analytics of globalization
and transnationalism, and while I recognize the necessity for an
intersectional (some would say “interstitial”) approach to socio-
political interpretation, description, and evaluation, I take an
additional, though certainly not incompatible, methodological step,
one which Brah and Phoenix may not wish to take. Not unlike the

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L.E.J. RUIZ 209
notion of the “body politic,” (racialized and gendered) Diaspora is not
only an epistemic paradigm; it is also a particular “way of being”—a
set of (religio-moral) practices, which has consequences both for the
analysis of “race” and power, and for its transformation. As I will
suggest in this essay, a full appreciation of intersectionality—including
an insistence on the importance of concrete, sensuous essentially
“strategic bodies”—embodied in the Stranger(s), which (racialized
and gendered) Diaspora, global capital, or empire produces and
reproduces26, provides both a context and condition for the possible
transformation of the practices of “race” and power.
In his analysis of modern international politics and global
capitalism, Michael Dillon notes:

Our age is one in which…the very activities of their own states—combined regimes of
sovereignty and governmentality—together with the global capitalism of states and
the environmental degradation of many populous regions of the planet have made
many millions of people radically endangered strangers in their own homes as well as
criminalized or anathemized strangers in the places to which they have been forced to flee. The
modern age’s response to the strangeness of others, indeed, the scale of its politically
instrumental, deliberate, juridical, and governmental manufacture of estrangement,
necessarily calls into question, therefore, its very ethical and political foundations
and accomplishments—particularly those of the state and of the international state
system.27 [Emphasis mine]

In the Philippine context, for example, this estrangement is clearly


demonstrated by the migration of Filipinos, today approaching over
ten million, to other parts of the planet—a condition shared by many
peoples in almost every region of the world.28 Such estrangement,
however, is not limited to those “outside” the homeland. The
experience of (racialized and gendered) Diaspora reverberates from
both “above” and “below” the conventionally drawn geopolitical, geo-
strategic, and territorial boundaries of individuals, peoples, nations,
states, and regions. The reasons for migration (and immigration), the
forms that they take, and the conditions under which they occur, are
many.29 Yet, such movements of peoples are generally characterized
by dispersal, displacement, and dislocation from particular origins
and locations. Perhaps, the most innovative metaphor deployed to
comprehend the reality of estrangement has been that of turbulence,
suggesting by its use not mere motion, activity, or movement, but
disruptive, unpredictable, volatile speed.30
To speak of (racialized and gendered) Diaspora today is to speak of
a specific human condition that is producing new forms of belonging
and identity not to mention novel understandings of contemporary

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210 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
politics and culture. Diaspora evokes and provokes images of
“borderlands,” “border crossings,” invasions, and estrangements; of
co-optations, negotiated settlements, and uncompromising refusals;
of logocentrisms and hybridities.31 It reveals global de-territorializing
trajectories as well as local re-territorializing surges or insurgencies,
especially under the conditions of an imploding transnational
capital.32 Diaspora underscores existing political, economic, cultural
and psychological/psychic contradictions and antagonisms, at the
same time that it intensifies their racialized and gendered uneven and
asymmetrical structures and processes.33
The other side of (racialized and gendered) Diaspora, which
arguably has been largely under-theorized, is its “subjective” effects
on individuals, peoples and institutions: the normalization of the
ideology of unlimited “permanent” change, the cultivation of cultures
of mobility and improvisation, the re-inscription of codes and symbols
of dispersal, displacement, and dislocation (e.g., money, maps,
information technologies, on-line and distance education), on peoples’
hearts, minds, and bodies, and, the seemingly endless invention and
re-invention of unfulfilled desires for “home”—multiple homes, to be
sure, but homes, nonetheless—often accompanied by the inevitable
yearnings for the innocent safety, security, and rest, of an idyllic
Garden of Eden.
Brah and Phoenix capture the complex terrain of the experience
of (racialized and gendered) Diaspora when they deploy the term
“diaspora space”:

The intersection of these three terms [referring to the concept of “diaspora” alongside
Gloria Anzaldua’s “border” and the feminist concept of “politics of home”] is
understood through the concept of ‘diaspora space’, which covers the entanglements
of genealogies of dispersal with those of ‘staying put’. The term ‘homing desire’ is used
to think through the question of home and belonging; and, both power and time are
viewed as multidimensional processes. Importantly, the concept of ‘diaspora space’
embraces the intersection of ‘difference’ in its variable forms, placing emphasis upon
emotional and psychic dynamics as much as socio-economic, political and cultural
differences. Difference is thus conceptualised as social relation; experience; subjectivity; and,
identity…the analytical focus is upon varying and variable subjectivities, identities, and the
specific meanings attached to ‘differences.’34 [Emphasis mine]

What might (racialized and gendered) Diaspora as the context


for the question of “race” and power mean for their interpretation,
description, and evaluation?
First, it raises a critical question about the nature of the social
totality of which we are a part. Not unlike the metaphor of the “body

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L.E.J. RUIZ 211
politic,” (racialized and gendered) Diaspora not only has forced
the negotiation and re-negotiation of political, epistemological, and
academic/disciplinary boundaries especially in terms of their long
held correspondence among nation, culture, identity and place35, but
in the re-articulation and re-conceptualization of the notions of space,
time, and place that emerges as a result of dispersal, displacement
and dislocation; it has also enabled us to uncover their racialized and
gendered character. Thus, Richard Thompson Ford has persuasively
argued, for example, that “racial segregation” in the US is created
and perpetuated by “racially identified space” and that the latter
“results from public policy and legal sanctions…rather than from
the unfortunate… consequences of purely private or individual
choices.”36
In a different though not unrelated context, Foucault may be
interpreted as underscoring the racialization of space—or, the
spatialization of “race” when he observes that

a whole history remains to be written of spaces—which would at the same time be


the history of powers (both these terms are in the plural)—from the great strategies
of geo-politics to the little tactics of the habitat… passing via economic and political
installations.37

Second, (racialized and gendered) Diaspora also raises a question


not only about subjecthood but also about subjectivity. This is the
question of “the Subject”: not only who the subject is but also what
being a subject entails and how it is simultaneously constructed or
constituted by the discourses in which it is embedded.38 Both the
plurality and contingency of subjects and subjectivities pre-supposed
by a “Diaspora” fundamentally challenge all ahistoric or essentialist
construals of “the Subject” and direct us not only to the question “What
is to be done?” but also to the questions of “who we are, what we hope
for, and where we go?”—in short, “What does it mean to be a people
under the conditions of (racialized and gendered) Diaspora?” And
while the questions of the subject and of subjectivities remind us of the
importance of agency and human action, they are now (re) set or “re-
installed” within a much deeper, broader, and wider intersectionality
and relationality. In this context, both “race” and power are not only
the effects of human action; they are also entanglements of structure,
process, and agency.
Third, the reality of (racialized and gendered) “Diaspora”
provides an organizing metaphor for situating the practices of “race”
and power at the intersections of self, other, and world. Of no small

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212 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
methodological significance, locating these practices within the
interstices of a peoples’ cultural practices—defined broadly as those
concrete, sensuous realities embodied in rhetorical forms, gestures,
procedures, modes, shapes, genres of everyday life: discursive
formations and/or strategies, if you will, which are radically contingent
arenas of imagination, strategy, and creative maneuver39—not only
challenges the narrow confines of conventional understandings of
“race” and power but also locates and positions “concrete” human
beings within a peoples’ pluralistic, and therefore, always and already
contradictory, antagonistic and agonistic histories, allowing, thereby
for an appreciation of their stories, songs, poetry, arts; their personal
and political struggles; and their economic and cultural institutions.
Another way of stating the point is to suggest that (racialized and
gendered) Diaspora ruptures the pretensions of modernity’s voracious
appetite for an intellectual idealism articulated alongside a possessive
individualism as the foundation for human thought and action,
and (re) positions them in their appropriate historical “places.”40 It
recuperates both human beings and human action, and affirms not
only their generative positions in the ecology of life: as creatures of
the past who transform their present in the name of the future but
also locates them in the wider context of what Friedrich Nietzsche
called the “grammatical fictions” created by discursive formations
and strategies.41
(Racialized and gendered) Diaspora as both an epistemic paradigm
and an organizing practice is always accompanied by estrangement.
That is to say, dispersal, displacement, and dislocation almost always
create the Stranger—the Other—which/who in my view poses
essentially a religio-moral challenge.42 In fact, the event of Diaspora
announces the existence of the racialized and gendered Other who
invites a religio-moral response, namely, hospitality. As a creature of
both modernity postmodernity,43 (racialized and gendered) Diaspora
radicalizes the experience of the Stranger or of Otherness in our time;
and the existence of the Stranger in our midst raises for us the problems,
prospects, and possibilities of fundamentally new and better forms of
knowledge and being. Strangeness, not to mention marginalization,
it seems, is the condition of possibility for community. It is its
constitutive outside. At the same time, if the Stranger is the constitutive
outside, then, its constitutive inside is hospitality, by which I mean,
the inclusion of the Stranger into a community not originally his or
her own, and which “arrives at the borders, in the initial surprise of
contact with an other, a stranger, a foreigner.”44 Indeed, in the Biblical

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L.E.J. RUIZ 213
tradition, the existence of the Stranger is always accompanied by the
challenge of hospitality towards the Stranger. Who the Stranger is, is
the socio-analytical question occasioned by the stranger’s existence;
how we treat the stranger in our midst [hospitality] is the ethical
demand which is not caused by the Stranger, only motivated by the
encounter.
To be sure there are temptations of repetition that lie at the heart
of hospitality. In fact, both the Stranger and the giver of hospitality
are not immune to the desire or temptation for “sameness” or
uniformity, even as the long experience of the condition of strangeness
and hospitality often breeds certain fetishes for such strangeness
and hospitality, not to mention desires for the exotic. Moreover,
hospitality does not always aspire towards genuine compassion, i.e.,
unconditional plenitude or regard. In other words, hospitality itself,
when implicated in the perpetuation of power and privilege always
casts its long shadow on the struggle for a “genuine” hospitality
that seeks to offer both the Stranger and the giver of hospitality
the opportunity to live well together in the context of their shared
differences. Indeed, the very structure of hospitality often must
posit the existence of strangers “in need of hospitality” dictating,
therefore the legitimation of structures and processes that exclude
before they include. Such exclusionary logics of, for example, “race,”
gender, class, migrate on to the structures of “hospitality” without
being overcome or transformed. Put differently, one must be open to
the possibility that strangeness and hospitality [i.e., “Diaspora”] are
necessary though insufficient conditions for the creation and nurture
of radically inclusive communities that are often hoped for by those
who are in Diaspora.

Racialized and Gendered Migration:


An Asian and Asian-North American Example

The burden of this entire essay has been to insist that “we should
stop thinking of race ‘as an essence, as something fixed, concrete
and objective...’ [and] instead think of ‘race as an unstable and
‘decentered’ complex of social meanings constantly being transformed
[through their inscription and re-inscription on the ‘body politic’] by
political struggle….” Such a burden requires a move from “race” to
“racialization,” and therefore, refusing the temptation to construe
power as some kind of capacity external to the latter, insisting,

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214 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
instead, that it is always and already an inextricable-part of the
“racial assemblage” as both productive (i.e., it produces an effect)
and coercive (i.e., it is incarcerative).45 Interpreting, describing, and
evaluating the signifying practices of “race” and power, then, must
yield to strategies informed by the realities of diversity and the
normative/aspirational demands of radical inclusion.
While my desire is to attempt some kind of articulation of what
these strategies might be, that will have to be undertaken another
day. Instead, I wish to conclude this essay with an example of how
Asian and Asian-North American accredited graduate theological
education looks like when it is drawn on the canvas of racialized and
gendered diaspora.46

What’s in a Name? —Dilemmas and Aporias47

Among the many dilemmas and aporias raised in the vast literature
of Asian and Asian-North American communities, theologies, and
leaderships, one in particular invites attention because around it
clusters several key issues with which I am concerned in this essay.48
Timothy Tseng observes that the terms “Asian American” or
“Asian and Pacific Islander American” are used to identify “East
Asians,” “Central Asians,” “Southeast Asians,” and “Pacific Islander
peoples.” In fact, these names are ciphers for communities with vast
and complex diversities of distinct, though interrelated, cultural,
political, and economic realities that are often contested, competitive,
and incommensurable—and implicated in the capitalist, racialized,
and gendered circuits of power, capital, labor, and knowledge. And
while these linguistic devices have become part of the identities of the
Asian and Asian-North American in their struggles for racial justice
since at least the 1960s, still they are creatures of colonialism and
neo-colonialism against which their liberative and transformative
potentials have often been interpreted and negotiated. These linguistic
devices are part of larger discursive and strategic formations that
embody actual “relations of ruling.” The point, of course, is not
only that language is not innocent, nor that who speaks and whose
language is spoken shapes the political agenda, but rather, that
language is simultaneously productive, performative, and coercive.
The weight of these linguistic devices cannot be underestimated.
They are, for example, associated with the sexualized racial and
gendered stereotypes like “the model minority,” or the “middle
minority,” or the “forever foreigner,” or the “honorary white”49

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that have historically shaped Asian and Asian North American
communities in perverse ways. At the same time these very devices
have set the stage for developing new and culturally appropriate
identities and strategies for transformation. Taken as a “social totality,”
they are what Rita Nakashima Brock calls a “palimpsest with multiple
traces written over a single surface.”50 The final report of the ATS-
Wabash Center-sponsored project, “Developing Teaching Materials
and Instructional Strategies for Teaching Asian and Asian American/
Canadian Women’s Theologies in North America” completed in 1999
by a group of Asian and Asian American women scholars is illustrative
of Brock’s methodological insight. In its self-organized, self- directed
structure and process the report addressed “as a single surface” the
problems of teaching and learning in accredited graduate theological
education, giving full play to the multiple locations and positionalities
of the project team, while offering a set of shared recommendations
on how to overcome the problems they identified.
Happily, these (stereotypical) names are not only “limit
situations” that regulate Asian and Asian-North American identities
and practice; they provide clues to their wider diversities. In the
context of the implicit challenges posed by the demographics noted
elsewhere in this essay, it is helpful to be reminded, as Jonathan Tan
does, that the multi-stranded character of Asian American theologies
has a generational element. “The first-generation Asian American
theologians,” he points out, “grounded their theologies on the issues
of social justice and liberation from all forms of institutional and
structural racism and discrimination” (p. 93). Issues of assimilation,
integration, and autonomy loomed large, as well as concerns for
“Asian Christian identity” in relation to both sides of the Pacific within
a largely church-based and mediated movement arising mainly out of
Chinese, Japanese, and Korean contexts in the 1960s and 1970s.
The second generation Asian American theologians include
among its ranks a much wider, more diverse group of Asians and
Asian North Americans reaching into multiple and overlapping
constituencies, disciplinary fields, ecclesial families, and political
and religio-moral commitments. Influenced, to some extent, by the
rise of the cultural studies movement of the 1980s and 1990s,51 it is
not surprising that second generation Asian American theologians
are more intentionally interdisciplinary in their approaches, and
they focus, in addition to issues of reconciliation and community
transformation, on the relations between faith, the bible, and
evangelism, on the one hand, and ethnicity, culture, and economy,

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216 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
as well as interfaith/inter-religious dialogue, on the other hand.
Moreover, while not oblivious to the call to engage with the claims
of a Pacific and global world, second generation Asian Americans
have a clear substantive, methodological, and political/institutional
commitment to their particular locations and positionalities that sees
the “local” and the “global” as co-constitutive.
This commitment is shaped by the subtle interplay between a
post-Newtonian, post-Kantian understanding of space, time and
place characteristic of postmodern postcolonial thought, and the
deep experiential rootedness in ancestral traditions and counter
traditions tied to land, body, even food. It is not surprising that one
of the dilemmas running through Asian and Asian-North American
academic and intellectual discourses on identity and practice is
how one positions one’s self vis-à-vis the temptation not only of
essentializing and homogenizing what it means to be “Asian,” but
of locating one’s self in the certainty of claims made by the so-called
“native informant.”52 This temptation is rendered more complex by the
geopolitical and geostrategic legacy of colonialism that limits “Asian”
mainly to its Pacific and Indian Ocean Rim, despite the historical
reality that Asia runs through southern Russia to the Caspian Sea.53
Thus, it is methodologically and spiritually refreshing to be reminded
not only that “Asian American” is a polymorphic, multivalent
palimpsest, but also that it is a “socio-historical object” whose forms,
capacities, behaviors, gestures, movements, and potentials ought not
to be limited to biological determinants or unchanging social statuses.

Where is Home?

The dilemma about one’s name, associated with one’s generational


and methodological location, is also a question about one’s “home”
within the larger ecology of the social totality that is constantly
being (re) interpreted. In fact, Asian and Asian-North American
communities, theologies, and leaderships are deeply rooted in
religio-moral communities shaped not only by specific generational
and disciplinary interests, but also by ecclesial commitments. Of the
three ecclesial families within the Association of Theological Schools
(Evangelical, Mainline, and Roman Catholic/Orthodox), the fastest
growing is the evangelical community, followed by the mainline
community, with the Roman Catholic/Orthodox community weighing
in as a small third.
With the majority of Asian and Asian-North American students

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L.E.J. RUIZ 217
being shaped by their evangelical heritage, and being taught by
faculty who largely self-identify with a largely “liberal” (some
would say postmodern, postcolonial) Asian Christianity, but who are
embedded in communities and institutions that may have to address
a less than hospitable cultural ethos, the challenge of finding religious,
intellectual, and spiritual homes (read “identities”) that are responsive
and accountable to a multicultural society looms large. For most
Asian American theologians serving under the flag of evangelicalism
(however understood), the main task is to discover what it means
to be “resolutely and vigorously” Asian, American, and Evangelical
all at once. For Amos Yong, this means building one’s identity and
practice on the historically mediated tenets of evangelicalism as they
are appropriated within particular Asian American contexts.54
The institutional side of finding a home is equally important.
This is the question of the future of Asian and Asian-American
Christianity which itself is changing. The dilemma may be put
polemically in this way: one could conceivably argue that Asian
and Asian North American Christianity cannot be extricated from
its historical, and therefore colonial past; that Christian identities in
the US and Canada, despite the long century between the time the
first missionaries “Christianized” Asians in their homelands to the
time Asian American Christianity planted itself in North America,
still holds sway, and that the many waves of Asian migrations and
immigrations to the US, in particular, is nothing more than the return
of the colonized to their homeland. Indeed, one may observe that an
Asian’s inherited Christian identity was often aligned with whichever
missionary group had occupied one’s homeland.
The point is not to return to the old contestation about the American
imperial and colonial project. That is a discussion for another day.
The point is a slightly different one, namely, given one’s Christian
inheritance, what are the conditions under which an authentically
transformative Christianity or religious identity and practice can be
articulated, and what is the role of accredited graduate theological
education in this articulation especially given its tendency to be
disconnected from the historic communities (e.g., the churches) that
give rise to the need for accredited graduate theological education
in the first place? And should the question be answered, however
provisionally that it is to the churches that accredited graduate
theological education needs to be attentive, if not accountable, then,
one will also have to ask what in the current practice of our learning,
teaching and research needs to be revisited, at the very least, in order

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218 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
to begin to address the larger questions of what Asian American
Christianity ought to look like at mid-century’s end.
The challenge of these multi-stranded diversities is at least three-
fold: how one understands such diverse locations and practices,
whether or not one can or ought to link these diversities, and how
one negotiates the linkages especially since what is at stake is not
only their plurality but their inextricable, mutually- challenging
and enhancing relations, under conditions not only of change but
of uneven, asymmetrical change. Such asymmetries particularly in
institutional resources that affect learning, teaching, and research,
as well as access to power and privilege can no longer be addressed
as if they were external to accredited graduate theological education
in North America, let alone to the formation of personal, political,
historical, and sacred being.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Dr. Lester Edwin J. Ruiz is Director of Accreditation and Institutional Evaluation
of the Association of Theological Schools in the U.S. and Canada, Commission on
Accrediting, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.

ENDNOTES
1
This is a slightly revised version of my essay that appears as “Recovering the
Body Politic: When ‘Race’ and Power Migrate” in Dietrich Werner, David Esterline,
Namsoon Kang, and Joshva Raja, eds., Handbook of Theological Education in World
Christianity: Theological Perspectives—Regional Surveys—Ecumenical Trends
(Oxford: Regnum Books International, 2010). Permission to reprint granted by
Regnum.

2
While there may be disagreement on the substantive, methodological, and
institutional definitions of “race” and power, I believe there can be agreement that their
multistranded locations and positionalities are necessarily articulated in the interstices
of a people’s political, economic, and cultural life and work. See, for example, Cornel
West, “A Genealogy of Modern Racism,” in Cornel West, Prophesy Deliverance:
An Afro-American Revolutionary Christianity (Philadelphia, PA: Westminster Press,
1982), pp. 47-65; Kwame Anthony Appiah, In My Father’s House (New York, NY:
Oxford University Press, 1993); Angela Davis, Women, Race, and Class (New York,
NY: Vintage, 1983); Margaret Andersen and Patricia Hill Collins, eds., Race, Class,
and Gender: An Anthology (Florence, KY: Wadsworth Publishing, 2009).
While it is true that the question of ”race” in the United States is articulated in
terms of the ideology of “white supremacy” and “white power and privilege,” from
a global perspective, it is not reducible to it. See, for example, Nadia Kim, Imperial
Citizens: Koreans and Race from Seoul to LA (Stanford, CA: Stanford University

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L.E.J. RUIZ 219
Press, 2008); Eileen O’Brien, The Racial Middle: Latinos and Asian Americans Living
Beyond the Racial Divide (New York: NY: New York University Press, 2008).

3
Situated in the context of a post-positivist, post-empiricist, poststructuralist
tradition, I deploy the term “practice” much in the same way Michel Foucault used
the term dispositif—“a resolutely heterogeneous assemblage, containing discourses,
institutions, architectural buildings (managements architecturaux), reglementary
decisions, scientific statements, philosophical, moral, philanthropic propositions…
said as well as non-said (du dit aussi bien que du non-dit)...”—to signify the delightful
and frustrating entanglements between “theory” (speculative reason), and “praxis”
(practical reason), and their interplay with the personal, the political, the historical, and
the sacred—in the service of transformation. See Michel Foucault, “The Confession
of the Flesh” in Power/Knowledge Selected Interviews and Other Writings, ed., Colin
Gordon (New York, NY: Pantheon, 1980), pp. 194-228.
Additionally, Giorgio Agamben’s notion of “apparatus,” by which he means, “a
kind of formation… that at a given historical moment has as its major function the
response to an urgency…always located in a power relation… and appears at the
intersection of power relations and relations of knowledge” [he uses the example
of the “mobile phone”] provides a richly textured and constructively suggestive
description of how one might understand “practice.” Cf. Giorgio Agamben, What is
an Apparatus? and Other Essays, trans. David Kishik and Stefan Pedatella (Stanford,
CA: Stanford University Press, 2009), pp. 2-3. Both Foucault and Agamben signal
my methodological preference for “thinking about” the question of “race” and power
within a wider polymorphic discursive formation, the resulting ambivalence of which
allows for a more inclusive analysis, and therefore, their possible transformation.

4
Michel Foucault, Michel Foucault: Aesthetics, Method and Epistemology, Essential
Works of Foucault, Vol. 2, ed. James D. Faubion, (New York, NY: The New Press,
1998), p. 476. Of the act of criticism, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak writes, “… a caution,
a vigilance, a persistent taking of distance always out of step with total involvement,
a desire for permanent parabasis is all that responsible academic criticism can aspire
to. Any bigger claim within the academic enclosure is a trick.” Gayatri Chakravorty
Spivak, A Critique of Postcolonial Reason: Toward a History of the Vanishing Present
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999), p. 362.

5
Manfred Halpern, Transforming the Personal, Political, Historical and Sacred in
Theory and Practice, ed., David Abalos (Scranton, PA: University of Scranton Press,
2009).

6
The question of “the purpose of knowledge” is of fundamental importance to any
aspiration for transformation. In the theologies of liberation, this notion is expressed
methodologically in terms of the “preferential option of the poor” which gets modified
over the years as “the epistemic privilege of the marginalized” or the “hermeneutical
significance of the excluded.” With recognition of the importance of location and
positionality, and therefore, the profound challenges to the notion of “the poor,”
I believe we are called again to think more critically and creatively about the “for
what and for whom?” of knowledge. Here, the task of the intellectual ought not to be
extricated from its entanglements with “political struggle in the name of the victim.”
Jacques Derrida notes in “Passages—from Traumatism to Promise," that “one of the
meanings of what is called a victim (a victim of anything or anyone whatsoever) is

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220 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
precisely to be erased in its meaning as victim. The absolute victim is a victim who
cannot even protest. One cannot even identify the victim as victim. He or she cannot
even present himself or herself as such. He or she is totally excluded or covered
over by language, annihilated by history, a victim one cannot identify... But there is
also the unreadability that stems from the violence of foreclosure, exclusion, all of
history being a conflictual field of forces in which it is a matter of making unreadable,
excluding, of positing by excluding, of imposing a dominant force by excluding, that
is to say, not only by marginalizing, by setting aside the victims, but also by doing
so in such a way that no trace remains of the victims, so that no one can testify to
the fact that they are victims or so that they cannot even testify to it themselves.
… To name and to cause the name to disappear is not necessarily contradictory.
Hence the extreme danger and the extreme difficulty there are in talking about the
effacement of names, Sometimes the effacement of the name is the best safeguard,
sometimes it is the worst “victimization.” …Cinders… is a trope that comes to take
the place of everything that disappears without leaving an identifiable trace. The
difference between the trace “cinder” and other traces is that the body of which
cinders is the trace has totally disappeared; it has totally lost its contours, its form,
its colors, its natural termination. Non-identifiable. And forgetting itself is forgotten.”
Jacques Derrida, Points…: Interviews, 1974-1994, ed. Elizabeth Weber (Stanford,
CA: Stanford University Press, 1995), pp. 387-391.

7
Michel Foucault, “The Concern for Truth,” in Politics, Philosophy, Culture: Interviews
and Other Writings, 1977-1984, ed. L. D. Kritzman (New York, NY: Routledge, 1988),
p. 265.

8
The linguistic device “(racialized and gendered) Diaspora,” however awkward,
is intentionally deployed in this essay to signal that “Diaspora” cannot only be
understood apart from “race” and “gender” but also that it cannot be understood
as a fixed, objective, essence. Moreover, this cipher cannot be extricated from
its entanglements with the demographic realities of “race in the US.” 2008 US
population projections by race/ethnicity provided by the US Census Bureau gives a
rather dramatic perspective of “race in the US.” With 2010 as the baseline, the White
population of 201 million is expected to reach 215 million by 2050; African Americans
will grow from 40 to 59 million; Asians from 16 to 38 million; and Hispanics from 50
to 133 million. This means that by 2050, the 2010 population projected at 312 million
will reach approximately 452 million. By mid-century, Whites will be 48 percent of the
population, African Americans, 13 percent, Asians, 8 percent, Hispanics, 30 percent,
and Others including American Indian and Alaska Native, 2 percent.
Numbers, of course, do not tell the whole story. But they suggest trajectories that
invite thought. If these projections are accurate, even leaving room for variances in
the unreported or undocumented US population, what the numbers indicate is that
Whites will remain the largest ethnic group in 2050; and while all four groups show
an increase in number, with Hispanics being the fastest growing of the group, these
increases remain circumscribed by the predominantly White population even though
there will be no clear majority. Still, as Daniel Aleshire, Executive Director of ATS has
recently pointed out this is a demographic sea change which has huge implications
not only for accredited graduate theological education, but for polity and economy as
well. For a recent discussion on “race” in accredited graduate theological education
in the US and Canada, see the special issue on “Race and Ethnicity” of Theological
Education 45: 1 (2009).

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L.E.J. RUIZ 221

9
Jayne Chong-Soon Lee, “Navigating the topology of race,” in Kimberle Crenshaw,
Neil Gotanda, Gary Peller, and Kendall Thomas, eds., Critical Race Theory (New
York, NY: The New Press, 1995), p. 441.

10
Chong-Soon Lee writes, “The benefits of substituting the notions of an ethnic or
cultural identity for a racial one are many. First, we can move away from the notion
that race is a biological attribute possessed only by people of color. Second, we
can undermine the racialist premise that moral and intellectual characteristics, like
physical traits, are inherited. Third, we can counter the belief that nature, not effort,
binds together members of a race. Fourth, we can rebut the idea that the ways in
which we act, think, and play are inherited rather than learned. As Henry Louis Gates,
Jr., has instructed us, ‘[o]ne must learn to be ‘black’ in this society, precisely because
‘blackness’ is a socially produced category” (p. 442).

11
Michael Omi and Howard A. Winant, Racial Formation in the United States from
the 1960s to the 1980s (New York: NY: Routledge, 1986), p. 68, cited in Chong-Soon
Lee, p. 443. See also, Omi and Winant, pp. 21-24.

12
“We should stop thinking of race,” Chong-Soon Lee writes, “’as an essence, as
something fixed, concrete and objective...’ we instead [should] think of ‘race as an
unstable and ‘decentered’ complex of social meanings constantly being transformed
by political struggle…” (p. 443).

13
For a discussion of the notion of root metaphors, see Gibson Winter, Liberating
Creation: Foundations of Religious Social Ethics (New York, NY: Crossroads, 1981).

14
Rose Weitz, ed., The Politics of Women's Bodies: Sexuality, Appearance, and
Behavior, 3rd ed. (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2009).

15
Allison Jaggar, “Love and Knowledge: Emotion in Feminist Epistemology,” in
Sandra Kemp and Judith Squires, eds., Feminisms (New York, NY: Oxford University
Press, 1997), p. 190.

16
Sandra Harding and Merrill B. Hintikka, eds., Discovering Reality: Feminist
Perspectives on Epistemology, Metaphysics, Methodology, and Philosophy of
Science, 2nd ed. (New York, NY: Springer, 2003); Jane Duran, Worlds of Knowing:
Global Feminist Epistemologies (New York, NY: Routledge, 2001).

17
Elisabeth Grosz, “Notes towards a corporeal feminism,” Australian Feminist
Studies 5 (1987): 2; See also, Elisabeth Grosz, Volatile Bodies: Towards a Corporeal
Feminism (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1994); Judith Butler, Gender
Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (New York, NY: Routledge, 2006);

18
Grosz, Volatile Bodies, Ibid.

19
Michel Foucault, “Nietzsche, Genealogy, History,” in Paul Rabinow, ed., The
Foucault Reader (New York, NY: Random House, 1984), p. 83.

20
See Isak Dinesen (Karen Blixen), Babette’s Feast and Other Anecdotes of Destiny

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222 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
(New York, NY: Vintage Books, 1988). Cf. “Babette’s Feast” (New York, NY: Orion
Home Video, 1988, 1989). See also Rubem Alves, Poet Warrior Prophet (London:
SCM, 1990).

21
Patricia Hill Collins, Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the
Politics of Empowerment, 2nd Edition (New York, NY: Routledge, 2000), pp. 273-290.
More recently, see, Patricia Hill Collins, Black Sexual Politics: African Americans,
Gender, and the New Racism (New York, NY: Routledge, 2004).

22
Chandra Talpade Mohanty, “Cartographies of Struggle: Third World Women
and the Politics of Feminism,” in Chandra T. Mohanty, Ann Russo, and Lourdes
Torres, eds., Third World Women and the Politics of Feminism (Bloomington, IN:
Indiana University Press, 1991), p. 14. Mohanty writes, “… third world women’s
writings on feminism have consistently focused on [1] the idea of the simultaneity of
oppressions as fundamental to the experience of social and political marginality and
the grounding of feminist politics in the histories of racism and imperialism; [2] the
crucial role of a hegemonic state in circumscribing their/our daily lives and survival
struggles; [3] the significance of memory and writing in the creation of oppositional
agency; and [4] the differences, conflicts, and contradictions internal to third world
women’s organizations and communities. In addition, they have insisted on the
complex interrelationships between feminist, antiracist, and nationalist struggles…
“Cartographies of Struggle,” p. 10. See also, Avta Brah and Ann Phoenix, “Ain’t I a
Woman? Revisiting Intersectionality” Journal of International Women’s Studies 5:3
(2004): 75-86.

My notion of “inscription” has its origins in Michel Foucault, Language, Counter-


23

memory, Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews, ed. Donald F. Bouchard (Ithaca,
NY: Cornell UP, 1977).

24
Brah and Phoenix, p. 83.

25
“We regard the concept of ‘intersectionality’,” Brah and Phoenix write, “as signifying
the complex, irreducible, varied, and variable effects which ensue when multiple
axis [sic] of differentiation – economic, political, cultural, psychic, subjective and
experiential – intersect in historically specific contexts,” p. 76.

26
(Racialized and gendered) Diaspora is certainly no stranger to global capital and
empire. The academic literature on this is extensive. See for example, Michael Mann,
Incoherent Empire (London, UK: Verso, 2003), David Harvey, The New Imperialism
(London, UK: Oxford University Press, 2003), Gopal Balakrishnan and Stanley
Aronowitz, eds., Debating Empire (London, UK: Verso, 2003), Michael Hardt and
Antonio Negri, Empire (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2000)); Michael
Hardt and Antonio Negri, Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire (New
York, NY: Penguin Press, 2004). See generally Paul A. Passavant and Jodi Dean,
eds., Empire’s New Clothes: Reading Hardt and Negri (New York, NY: Routledge,
2004). See especially Ernesto Laclau, “Can Immanence Explain Empire?” in
Passavant and Dean, Empire’s New Clothes, pp, 21-30. Cf. Mark Taylor, Religion,
Politics, and the Christian Right: Post 9/11 Powers in American Empire (Philadelphia,
PA: Augsburg Fortress Press, 2005), Sharon Welch, After Empire: The Art and Ethos
of Enduring Peace (Philadelphia, PA: Augsburg Fortress Press, 2004).

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L.E.J. RUIZ 223
In this context, Charles Amjad-Ali and I have suggested elsewhere that every
empire, whatever their raison d’etre, is fundamentally an articulation of racialized and
gendered power. Rudyard Kipling’s famous poem, “White Man’s Burden: The United
States and the Philippine Islands, 1899,” with its binary beknighted natives and do-
gooder colonizing Westerners, is a classic example of racialized and gendered power.
Though a British colonialist, Kipling urged the US to pursue its colonial and imperial
project, while justifying the effort as a great contribution to the colonized peoples
of the Philippines. See, Charles Amjad Ali and Lester Edwin J. Ruiz, “Betrayed by
a Kiss: Evangelicals and US Empire,” in Bruce Ellis Benson and Peter Goodwin
Heltzel, eds., Evangelicals and Empire: Christian Alternatives to the Political Status
Quo (Grand Rapids, MI: Brazos Press, 2008), pp. 54-66.
It is also interesting to note that the direction, say of migrant labor—whether
documented or undocumented—moves from “the global south” to the “global north,”
and that the “victims” of global capital (not to mention the Indo-China War and the
three Gulf Wars) are largely peoples of color are enough to illustrate the racialized
and gendered character of global capital and empire. See footnotes 28 and 29.
Moreover, Richard Slotkin has documented the mythology of “moral regeneration
through violence” that runs through US history. See Richard Slotkin, Regeneration
through Violence: The Mythology of the American Frontier, 1600-1860 (Tulsa, OK:
University of Oklahoma Press, 2000).

27
Michael Dillon, “Sovereignty and Governmentality: From the Problematics of the
‘New World Order’ to the Ethical Problematic of the World Order.” Alternatives: Social
Transformation and Humane Governance 20, no. 3 (Spring 1995): 323-368.

28
The racialized and gendered character of migration is evident throughout the
following documentary examples: International Migrants Alliance, 2008 Founding
Assembly Documents (Hong Kong: International Migrants Alliance, 2008). See also,
Barbara Ehrenreich and Arlie Russell Hochschild, eds., Global Woman: Nannies,
Maids, and Sex Workers in the New Economy (New York, NY: Henry Holt and
Company, 2002); Grace Chang, Disposable Domestics: Immigrant Women Workers
in the Global Economy (Cambridge, MA: Southend Press, 2000); Migrant Forum in
Asia, http://www.mfasia.org/ (accessed February 22, 2010).

29
(Racialized and gendered) Diaspora has many faces. See for example, on
internally displaced peoples, Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, http://
www.internal-displacement.org/8025708F004D404D/%28httpPages%29/
CC32D8C34EF93C88802570F800517610 (accessed February 24, 2010); on
child trafficking, UNICEF, http://www.unicef.org/protection/index_exploitation.
html (accessed February 24, 2010); on women, http://www.unifem.org/worldwide/
(accessed February 24, 2010); Rhacel Salazar Parrenas, Children of Global
Migration: Transnational Families and Gendered Woes (Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 2005); Daniel Rothenberg, With These Hands: The Hidden World
of Migrant Farm Workers Today (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2000);
Additionally, useful demographic information concerning migration, may be found
in, for example, International Organization for Migration, http://www.iom.int/jahia/
jsp/index.jsp (accessed February 21, 2010); UN Office of the High Commissioner
on Human Rights, http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/cmw.htm (accessed February
22, 2010; International Labor Organization, http://www.ilo.org/global/lang--en/index.
htm (accessed February 23, 2010); International Migrant Stock. http://esa.un.org/

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224 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
migration/ (accessed February 23, 2010).

30
Nikos Papastergiadis, The Turbulence of Migration: Globalization, Deterritorialization,
and Hybridity (Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, 2000), pp. 3-21.

31
Gloria Anzaldua, La frontera/Borderlands (San Francisco, CA: Aunt Lute Books,
1999). See also, Marwan M. Kraidy, Hybridity, Or The Cultural Logic of Globalization
(Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 2005).

32
Saskia Sassen, Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2008). Cf. R.B.J. Walker, Inside/Outside:
International Relations as Political Theory (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University
Press, 1992).

33
Gayatri C. Spivak and Judith Butler, Who Sings the Nation-State? Language,
Politics, Belonging (Salt Lake City, UT: Seagull Books, 2007). Cf. Floya Anthias and
Nira Yuval-Davis, Racialized Boundaries: Race, Nation, Gender, Colour and Class
and the Anti-Racist Struggle (New York, NY: Routledge, 1993).

34
Brah and Phoenix, “Ain’t I a Woman?”, p. 83.

35
Etienne Balibar and Immanuel Wallerstein, Race, Nation, Class (London, UK:
Verso, 1991). Cf. Epiphanio San Juan, In the Wake of Terror: Class, Race, Nation,
Ethnicity in the Postmodern World (New York: Lexington Books, 2007).

36
Richard Thompson Ford, “The Boundaries of Race: Political Geography in Legal
Analysis,” in Crenshaw, Gotanda, et al, Critical Race Theory, pp. 449-465. “Segregation
is the missing link in prior attempts to understand the plight of the urban poor. As long
as blacks continue to be segregated in American cities, the United States cannot
be called a race-blind society.” Douglas S. Massey and Nancy A Denton, American
Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 1998), p.3.

37
Michel Foucault, “The Eye of Power” in Colin Gordon, ed., Power/Knowledge:
Selected Interviews and Other Writings, 1972-1977 (New York, NY: Pantheon, 1980),
pp. 146-149.

38
Eduardo Cadava, Peter Connor, and Jan-Luc Nancy, eds., Who Comes After the
Subject? (New York, NY: Routledge Publishers, 1991).

39
Michael Ryan, Politics and Culture: Working Hypotheses for a Post Revolutionary
Society (Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989). See also,
Tat-Siong Benny Liew, “Margins and (Cutting-)Edges: On the (Il)Legitimacy and
Intersections of Race, Ethnicity, and (Post)Colonialism,” in Stephen D. Moore
and Fernando F. Segovia, eds. Postcolonial Biblical Criticism: Interdisciplinary
Intersections (New York, NY: Continuum, 2005), 114-65; Rita Nakashima Brock, Jung
Ha Kim, Kwok Pui-Lan, Seung Ai Yang, eds., Off the Menu: Asian and Asian North
American Women’s Religion and Theology (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox
Press, 2007).

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L.E.J. RUIZ 225
40
C.B. Macpherson, The Political Theory of Possessive Individualism: Hobbes to
Locke (Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press, 1962).

41
I believe it would be a misunderstanding of Foucault’s dispositif or Agamben’s
“apparatus” if they were to be interpreted as repudiating the validity of “individual and
collective” human action. Cf. Paul Ricoeur, Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences:
Essays on Language, Action and Interpretation, trans. John B. Thompson (Cambridge,
UK: Cambridge University Press, 1981). See also, Paul Ricoeur, Oneself as Another,
trans. Kathleen Blamey (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1995).

42
Emmanuel Levinas. Totality and Infinity: An Essay on Exteriority, trans. Alphonso
Lingis (Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne University Press, 1969. My own notion of
“the Other,” particularly with reference to the dialogical “face-to-face” resonates
with Levinas’ notion of exteriority. See, Lester Edwin J. Ruiz, “Diaspora, empire,
resistance: peace and the subaltern as rupture(s) and repetition(s)” in Shin Chiba and
Thomas J. Schoenbaum, eds. Peace Movements and Pacifism After September 11
(Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2008), pp. 49-76.

43
The modern-postmodern divide is a profoundly contested one. By placing them in
proximity, as I do in this essay, I want to suggest that these structures of meaning
are best understood in both their continuities and discontinuities of method, cultural
form, and political practice. Thus, I understand modernity and postmodernity less
as periodizations and more as “conditions,” “sensibilities,” and “practices.” My own
orientation, sensibility, and location are probably more congenial with the theory and
practice of postcoloniality than with modernity or postmodernity. See, for example, Bill
Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths, and Helen Tiffin, eds., The Post-Colonial Studies Reader
(New York, NY: Routledge, 1995). See also, Anthony Giddens, The Consequences
of Modernity (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1991). Jean Francois Lyotard,
The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge (Minneapolis, MN: University of
Minnesota Press, 1984).

44
This I take to be the philosophical significance of Jacques Derrida’s January 1996
Paris lectures on “Foreigner Question” and “Step of Hospitality/No Hospitality,”
published in Jacques Derrida and Anne Dufourmantelle, Of Hospitality, trans., Rachel
Bowlby (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2000). For the political significance
of the “stranger” see Bonnie Honig, Democracy and the Foreigner (Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 2001).

45
Here I understand power in the way Foucault understood the notion of
“governmentality,” by which he meant, “the ensemble formed by the institutions,
procedures, analyses and reflections, the calculations and tactics that allow the
exercise of this very specific albeit complex form of power, which has as its target
population, as its principal form of knowledge political economy, and as its essential
technical means apparatuses of security… the tendency which, over a long period and
throughout the West, has steadily led towards the pre-eminence over all other forms
(sovereignty, discipline, etc) of this type of power which may be termed government,
resulting, on the one hand, in formation of a whole series of specific governmental
apparatuses, and, on the other, in the development of a whole complex of savoirs…”
[the structural similarities between “racialization” and “power-as-governmentality”
should be obvious here]. Michel Foucault, “On Governmentality” in Graham Burchell,

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226 RECOVERING THE BODY POLITIC
Colin Gordon, and Peter Miller, eds., The Foucault Effect: Studies in Governmentality
(Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1991), pp. 102-103.

46
This final section of the essay is adapted from a previously published essay,
“What Do We Do with the Diversity that We Already Are? The Asian and Asian North
American in Accredited Graduate Theological Education” by Lester Edwin J. Ruiz and
Eleazar S. Fernandez in Theological Education 45: 1 (2009): 41-58.

47
As David Campbell notes, “An aporia is an undecidable and ungrounded political
space, were no path is ‘clear and given’ where no ‘certain knowledge opens up the
way in advance,’ where no ‘decision is already made.’” See, “The deterritorialization of
responsibility: Levinas, Derrida, and ethics after the end of philosophy,” Alternatives:
Social Transformation and Humane Governance 19:4 (1994): 475. It’s what we might
find at the center of our historic biblical faith.

48
Partly, in the interest of brevity, and largely because of my limited capacity to be
exhaustive, this section is intended primarily to be illustrative of what I consider
productive guideposts for understanding and negotiating the rituals of Asian and
Asian-North American in the context of accredited graduate theological education. In
effect, it is an exercise in selective cartography or mapping.

49
Jonathan Tan, Asian American Theologies (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2008), pp.
36-56.

Cited in Tat-Siong Benny Liew, “Review of Off the Menu: Asian and Asian North
50

American Women’s Religion and Theology,” American Academy of Religion Annual


Meeting, (2007), p. 4.

51
Political and intellectual movements in the 1980s and 1990s are complex, often
contradictory. Still the legacies of critical theory and hermeneutics, as well as feminist,
womanist, and queer theory, and their myriad delineations along post-structuralist,
post-positivist, post-modern, and post-colonial lines have shaped, for good or ill, the
work of Asian American scholars, academics, and public intellectuals.

52
Spivak, A Critique of Postcolonial Reason, fn. 3.

53
If “Asian” were to be fully “extended” methodologically and spiritually to correspond
with this wider geography of “Asia,” then, a (re) articulation would be required in our
understanding of who Asian Americans are. This will mean, for example, that Islam
will become a much larger part of Asian and Asian-North American self-understanding
and practice—a sea change of huge proportions.

54
Amos Yong, “The Future of Asian Pentecostal Theology: An Asian American
Assessment,” Asian Journal of Pentecostal Studies 10:1 (2007): 22-41. The
challenge of Asian American evangelicalism is particularly strong in Chinese and
Korean Christianity with the exponential growth they have experienced in the past
ten to 20 years.

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“This Is My Body”:
The Theopolitics of (Re)Inscription

karl james evasco villarmea

I
have the happy opportunity to exchange ideas with Dr. Lester
Ruiz for the last several months already over Facebook threads
and emails. I am pleased to continue it here! Although this paper
is a more traditional way of exchanging ideas, it is certainly no
less significant as it signifies multiple and different ways of being
today, that is, to express and experience the other that makes one,
importantly, think. So I must first manifest my gesture of appreciation
for this opportunity to respond to this paper (of the other in the
context of others) however provisional and gestural it is.
In this theoretically-nuanced article, Ruiz demonstrates the
significance to re-think the conditions, or say, foundation (to
philosophically inclined readers: ontology; and, to more sociologically
and anthropologically inclined readers: heritage or tradition), upon
which we construe race and gender of the body, and the (experience
of) diaspora. Although one could say as well that the overall purpose
of this paper is to suggest an epistemological frame for social
transformation, and more particularly, ways in which such frame
could help “(de)form accredited graduate theological education in
the US.” Having received masteral degrees and now a PhD student
in the US, I find this kind of project not only a theoretical but also,
and to a large extent, an existential one. I will share a couple and
brief accounts in this regard if only to point at and heighten important
issues.

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228 THE THEOPOLITICS OF (RE)INSCRIPTION

To talk/think about the body is to talk/think about the divine/


divinity. This is not only a core theme in feminist and womanist
theologies. It is inscribed as well in the very heart of Christianity—
God became man, fully human and fully divine, crucified and raised
from the dead. It is a racialized (Jew) and sexualized (male/man)
and violated (crucified) divine, indeed a vulnerable divine, precisely
because, it takes and assumes and presents itself in a body, subject
to constraint and power. In Christian theology, what happens to the
divine happens to the body and what happens to the body happens
to the divine.
In modern Western Christian history, this body, however, is mostly
and unfortunately buried. The results are rampant and obvious:
racism, (hetero)sexism, and violence against the body. Recovering
this body (the trace and mark of this divinity body) hence is urgent
and important much so in a time when bodies are (dis/re)placed and
sourced out for labor in order to produce and reproduce goods for
global consumption; or theologically put, in a gnostic time when the
body is only a means for a higher good (capital/surplus). What is
emphasized here is not morality per se but rather the relationality
and the connection of the materiality and the divinity of the body.
Because when we sever the nexus of the material and the divine, the
result is catastrophic. Life is diminished and death flourished. (It
might be noteworthy to point out here as an example that more teen
suicides are committed because Christians devalue their body and
their sexualities).
If what Ruiz suggests in this article is to take up this ontological-
epistemological position, then what lies before us—should we heed his
call—is a political and ethical task of reconfiguring our “body politic”
(his particular example, of course, is theological education of ATS).
While I agree with what this might mean, I am not sure, however, if
this has to be primarily and necessarily framed ecclesiastically.
I am tempted to discuss further some implications of this matter—
as Ruiz clearly emphasizes—to theological education and to offer my
own reflections on ritual/ization in public life as a way to respond to
such task. However, there is another “window” that might be more
useful for us—educators at Silliman especially—to view and think
about.
Although this is a site-particular paper, this article nonetheless
suggests ways in which educational practices and assumptions in
the Philippines could be reconsidered. It raises critical and important
pedagogical questions for educators who prepare and educate and

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K.J.E. VILLARMEA 229
nurture future generations of professionals and workers—more so
for a country economically supported by diaspora.
As educators in a country that exports workers and professionals,
how do we produce knowledge? What is the basis of such production
and reproduction? And to what (or whom) does this serve? These
are not simply rhetorico-theoretical questions, but as Ruiz points out,
these have something to do with the status and the physicality of the
existence of the body—or, indeed to the flourishing of human life.
Moreover, the discussion of this subject matter should prove relevant
as the Philippine Government today seeks to promote vocational
education and technical skills training among most Filipinos.
In an institution like Silliman, these questions are much more
relevant and important. For what is at stake in its response could
signify (if not reinscribe) the kind of commitment it has to its faith-
tradition upon which it is built. Several questions we could ask here in
relation to Silliman and its mission and vision: does Silliman education
enable the messianic mission (the via, veritas, vita) of Jesus? Or more
specifically, does its education aim to contribute to the fundamental
transformation of the social order? Does it enable knowledge that
welcomes without condition? Does it enable commitment to serve the
least among us? Or does its education only serve the liberal state? If
not, the global capitalist market?
As I see it, this will not throw us back to the old ideological debate.
Rather it could provoke us to think about what it means to create a
more humane society and enable us to open up our human vista that
could help us navigate our country toward a more democratic society.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

karl james e. villarmea is Assistant Professor, Religious Studies Program, Silliman


University Divinity School, currently pursuing a PhD in Theology in Chicago,
Illinois, USA.

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Graduate Theological Education in
and for a (Racialized and Gendered)
Diaspora

Dennis P. McCann

D
r. Ruiz’s essay is meant to invite us all into a new conversation
about the Filipino Diaspora as it struggles to achieve a
certain level of critical clarity about its varied experiences.
As ambitious and demanding as that conversation is likely to be,
he also hopes to steer our reflections toward their implications for
transforming graduate theological education in the USA. Having
some idea of Dr. Ruiz’s work over the years, I am not surprised by his
agenda; however, I was somewhat perplexed by the idea that all this
considerable effort in postmodernist deconstruction should still be
geared primarily toward transforming theology in the USA. I would
have imagined that the readers of the Silliman Journal would be more
interested in a reassessment of theological education in the Philippines.
But, then again, Dr. Ruiz may be onto something important for all of
us, and not just for Filipinos who’ve risked becoming strangers in a
strange land.
The argument sketched in Dr. Ruiz’s essay is complex. At first,
readers may find it disjointed, as if there are three or four very
challenging points addressed, but with few clues on how to put
them all together in a coherent synthesis. But a second or even a
third reading may help us to understand the main thread running
through them, which is an assessment of the varied experiences
of Filipinos as members of a globalized and globalizing Diaspora
community. Dr. Ruiz means to challenge our preconceived notions

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D.P. MCCANN 231
about Diaspora experience, whatever they may be, by outlining an
alternative narrative in which race, gender, and the asymmetries of
power that these signify are now to be located in the foreground of
the conversation. The new narrative is meant to be transformative.
A new “body politic” will emerge from consciousness-raising about
the actual bodies in and through which we share our Diaspora
experiences.
For many of us—particularly those readers who have been either
the beneficiaries or the victims of a graduate theological education—
the term, “Diaspora,” first emerges in Biblical studies, as we learn of
the significance of the dispersion, both coerced and voluntary, of the
Jewish communities in the Hellenistic world after the collapse of the
kingdoms of Israel and Judah. Historians regard this Jewish diaspora
as an indispensable condition for the rapid spread of Christianity
throughout the Mediterranean, starting with the missionary journeys
of Paul the Apostle. The underlying metaphor of dispersion, however,
was used earlier in Jesus’ Parable of the Sower (Mark 4:1-20, Matthew
13:1-23, and Luke 8:1-15) to prepare his disciples for the mixed
results that their preaching might yield, among diverse peoples with
varying personal agenda and dispositions. Though Dr. Ruiz doesn’t
belabor the point, his anti-essentialist approach to understanding the
Diaspora seems ultimately rooted in Jesus’ own refusal to retreat into
lofty abstraction. At some level, then, being or becoming members
of a Diaspora community is an inevitable part of following the Way
of Jesus. The Christian churches—all of them and not just those
served primarily by Dr. Ruiz’s ATS—are Diaspora communities,
and therefore stand in need of recovering a realistic understanding
of what it means to be a Diaspora. This is left unsaid in Dr. Ruiz’s
essay, but surely it is implicit in his concluding section on graduate
theological education.
Dr. Ruiz’s own focus is on Diaspora in a historically embodied
sense, namely, the experiences of Filipino men and women as they
struggle to live in and through, and in spite of the processes of
globalization. Challenged as I am by Dr. Ruiz’s self-acknowledged
status as “a privileged Asian male in the US,” I must confess to being
a privileged American male, though one bonded by marriage to the
fate of the Filipino people and their beloved islands. By what right
should I be saying anything about Dr. Ruiz’s analysis of Diaspora
experience? Well, for one thing, I felt personally challenged by what
he had to say. He awakened once more the subversive memory of my
Irish Catholic ancestors.

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232 GRADUATE THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION AND DIASPORA
After all, Filipinos are not the only people to have ever experienced
the ambiguous reality of Diaspora. For the past 200 years or more,
the Irish, themselves another island race, have been both coerced
and volunteered for emigration to distant shores, and largely for the
same reasons that drive Filipinos to work overseas today—lack of
opportunity to advance socially and economically at home, coupled
at times, with a sense of oppression at the hands of colonial and
neocolonial masters, or a taste for adventure, or both. There was a
time in Ireland—the romanticized homeland of our folksongs and
dreams—when there seemed to be no one about but the very, very
young, and the very, very old. Virtually everyone else were either
abroad working or preparing to go abroad for work. Sounds familiar?
The subversive memory of my Irish ancestors, then, makes me
quite sympathetic to Dr. Ruiz’s attempt to focus our theological
reflections through the lens of Filipino Diaspora experiences, but it
also makes me a bit leery. Has he fully acknowledged the complexity
of those experiences? The postmodernist theory he uses to structure
his account of Diaspora experience, for example, quite predictably
emphasizes “estrangement,” understood as the “turbulence”
produced by “dispersal, displacement, and dislocation from particular
origins and locations.”
To be sure, Dr. Ruiz—following the indicators provided by his
postmodernist analyses of race, gender, and power—understands
“estrangement” as a construct bearing “images of ‘borderlands,’
‘border crossings,’ invasions, and estrangements; of co-optations,
negotiated settlements, and uncompromising refusals; of
logocentrisms and hybridities. It reveals global de-territorializing
trajectories as well as local re-territorializing surges or insurgencies,
especially under the conditions of an imploding transnational
capital.” Over and above its objective characteristics, he also notes
“its ‘subjective’ effects on individuals, peoples and institutions: the
normalization of the ideology of unlimited “permanent” change,
the cultivation of cultures of mobility and improvisation, the re-
inscription of codes and symbols of dispersal, displacement, and
dislocation (e.g., money, maps, information technologies, on-line and
distance education), on peoples’ hearts, minds, and bodies, and, the
seemingly endless invention and re-invention of unfulfilled desires
for ‘home’—multiple homes, to be sure, but homes, nonetheless—
often accompanied by the inevitable yearnings for the innocent safety,
security, and rest, of an idyllic Garden of Eden.”
The chief advantage, in Dr. Ruiz’s view, of introducing this

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D.P. MCCANN 233
postmodernist mapping of race, gender and power into our reflections
on Diaspora experiences is that “estrangement” is not to be considered
simply as a token of victimization—though clearly there is more
than enough of that operative in the lives of people struggling to
survive under the often unfavorable terms of economic globalization.
Instead, “estrangement” should also be understood as opening up a
new path toward moral agency and responsibility. In Dr. Ruiz’s view,
“estrangement” makes it possible for those experiencing themselves
as part of the Filipino Diaspora not only to question “‘What is to be
done?’ but also to [ask] ‘who we are, what we hope for, and where we
go?’—in short, ‘What does it mean to be a people under the conditions
of (racialized and gendered) Diaspora?’” Once these basic ethical
questions are raised, it becomes possible to inquire into the religious
and theological significance of Filipino diaspora existence today.
All this is to the good, in my view, and I applaud Dr. Ruiz for
taking our conversation in that direction. But I hope we can go further.
While some very important trajectories stand revealed in Dr. Ruiz’s
discussion of “estrangement,” we should also consider what gets
obscured by it. What I find missing is a sense that “estrangement”
begins at home. Granted, those who go abroad often discover they
have bitten off more than they can chew. But why did they have to go
in the first place? They came of age in a society that either had little
use for them or was unwilling or unable to compensate their labors
and talents in ways that would allow them to live with human dignity.
Nor were their motives in going abroad always and inevitably focused
on making more money. How many Filipinas now working abroad,
for example, have had to leave because they’ve crashed against glass-
ceilings and other obstacles perpetuated by local elites? For how
many was their motive as much to preserve their own self-respect as
it was to change the socio-economic status of their families?
My own series of interviews with Filipina women living in
Bethune House in Hong Kong, under the auspices of the Mission for
Migrant Workers, suggests that on average, such women are better
educated and more resourceful than those they left behind. Why was
there no room for them or their talents at home? At what ultimate
price to their families, loved ones, and neighbors, as well as to the
overall development of the Philippines, comes their reluctant decision
to try to better themselves abroad? A truly critical reassessment of
their (racialized and gendered) Diaspora experiences will not be
complete until the social and economic injustices by which some
Filipinos prosper by oppressing their neighbors is fully addressed.

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234 GRADUATE THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION AND DIASPORA
Dr. Ruiz’s agenda, because of his refusal to conceive of the Diaspora
situation in outmoded binary forms of analysis—including the
conventional paradigms of master/slave, oppressor/oppressed—
carries the promise of enabling us to address these concerns more
effectively. One can only hope that his theoretical reflections will
inspire empirical research in psychology and the social sciences as
we seek to understand what all is really going on in and through the
processes of globalization.
There is reason to hope, and not surprisingly—at least not to
those of us who understand the importance of critical theological
reflection—it may be found in the religious implications of living in
the Diaspora. As Dr. Ruiz observes:

the event of Diaspora announces the existence of the racialized and gendered Other
who invites a religio-moral response, namely, hospitality. As a creature of both
modernity [and] postmodernity, (racialized and gendered) Diaspora radicalizes the
experience of the Stranger or of Otherness in our time…. Strangeness, not to mention
marginalization, it seems, is the condition of possibility for community…. Indeed,
in the Biblical tradition, the existence of the Stranger is always accompanied by
the challenge of hospitality towards the Stranger. Who the Stranger is, is the socio-
analytical question occasioned by the stranger’s existence; how we treat the stranger
in our midst [hospitality] is the ethical demand which is not caused by the Stranger,
only motivated by the encounter.

What Dr. Ruiz is affirming should be obvious to anyone who has


sojourned among the Filipinas laboring in the Hong Kong Diaspora.
The work of Cynthia Abdon-Tellez is rightly honored at the beginning
of Dr. Ruiz’s essay. For over 25 years, the Mission for Migrant Workers
has provided counseling and other support services, including
political organization and legal aid, to Filipinas and Indonesians
serving as “foreign domestic helpers” in Hong Kong. It is no accident
that this Mission, as well as the shelter it sponsors at Bethune House,
is established in Christian churches, at the Anglican Cathedral of St.
John and the Kowloon Union Church. But this Mission, it turns out, is
rather unique in Hong Kong, in that it is open to people of all religions
or no religions at all, and has never been focused on serving the needs
of Filipinas to the exclusion of women from other countries. Bethune
House, as far as I can tell, is the only religiously inspired community
in Hong Kong in which Diaspora space is joyfully and generously
shared among Christians, Catholics, and Muslims. My point is that
the hospitality urged by Dr. Ruiz is actually creating a new kind of
religious community in the Diaspora, one that is ecumenical and
interfaith from the ground up.

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D.P. MCCANN 235
No wonder that such a community has also become the most
effective vehicle for political mobilization in the Hong Kong Diaspora.
One of the persistent weaknesses of the churches in Hong Kong is
their failure to reach out to one another in some form of ecumenical
coalition, to work together on common problems that they and their
constituencies face in a city increasingly dominated by an oligarchy
constituted by commercial wealth and its privileged access to
government power—regardless of the government’s official status in
the People’s Republic of China. By serving the needs of (racialized
and gendered) Diaspora communities from the Philippines and
Indonesia, the Mission is a harbinger of the hope that Dr. Ruiz rightly
places in a reconstructed Biblical ethics of hospitality.
At the same time, however, the Mission is merely the tip of the
iceberg of what’s happening religiously in Hong Kong. Dr. Ruiz’s
analysis may help us to understand how and why, with his helpful
emphasis on transformations in “Subjectivity.” Anyone who goes to
church regularly in Hong Kong, attending either Catholic or Protestant
services or both, as my wife and I do, cannot help but notice that
many of the churches would be nearly empty. Save for the Filipinos
who've come to worship there. Indeed, the Diaspora experience
seems to involve, among other things, an intensification of religious
devotion, a strengthening of religious identities that enable Filipinas
to survive whatever outrages they must endure on a daily basis in
their domestic employment. Based on the initial interviews I’ve done
at Bethune House, I have the impression that my informants have
become more religious while working in Hong Kong than they may
have been at home, where going to church was more of a convention,
an inherited family tradition. In short, as Dr. Ruiz’s remarks suggest,
their religious identities, or the role of religion in their Filipino cultural
identities, are being transformed.
One can only wonder what will happen when the Filipinas
eventually return home. Will they forget all about the experiences
they’ve had in the Diaspora, or will they seek to build upon the new
“Subjectivity” that they’ve acquired through the experience of living
in new forms of Christian solidarity? We need to be thinking about
what their Diaspora experience will eventually mean for the churches
of the Philippines and their role in the nation’s public life.
Now at last you may understand my initial perplexity over Dr.
Ruiz’s desire to apply what he’s thinking about the (racialized and
gendered) Diaspora to graduate theological education in the USA.
What he has to say about this is typically insightful and responsive to

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236 GRADUATE THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION AND DIASPORA
the struggles of Asian-American Christians to exercise leadership in
the seminaries and divinity schools in that country. They deserve all
the respect and support that we can give them. ]But I am reminded of
one of the hard sayings of Jesus, “Follow Me, and let the dead bury
their own dead” (Matthew 8:22; Luke 9:60). While the processes of
globalization—which go on inside as well as outside the churches—
make it all the more important to empower Asian-American leaders
in and for graduate theological education in the USA, one must also
hope that the first priority would be upon the transformation of
graduate theological education in the Philippines itself. My hunch
is that it may be easier to advocate a (racialized and gendered)
Diaspora consciousness in the institutions served by Dr. Ruiz’s
ATS, than it would be to get a respectful hearing for such innovative
(and prophetically disturbing) proposals among the churches in the
Philippines.
One of the great obstacles to learning from the Diaspora
experiences at home is the general lack of interest in anyone’s religious
tradition other than one’s own. Alas, even Dr. Ruiz seems remarkably
indifferent to the legacy of Roman Catholicism in either the USA or
the Philippines. His tacit narrative on the religious history of the
Philippines is unwittingly exposed in this comment on the challenge
of finding a religious “home” in the Diaspora. Consider this passage:
This is the question of the future of Asian and Asian-American
Christianity which itself is changing. The dilemma may be put
polemically in this way: one could conceivably argue that Asian
and Asian North American Christianity cannot be extricated from
its historical, and therefore colonial past; that Christian identities in
the US and Canada, despite the long century between the time the
first missionaries “Christianized” Asians in their homelands to the
time Asian American Christianity planted itself in North America,
still holds sway, and that the many waves of Asian migrations and
immigrations to the US, in particular, is nothing more than the return
of the colonized to their homeland. Indeed, one may observe that an
Asian’s inherited Christian identity was often aligned with whichever
missionary group had occupied one’s homeland.
Where to begin? While it is understandable, and all too common
among Filipino Protestants to assume that these islands were never
evangelized until the arrival of Protestant missionaries slightly more
than a century ago, such a narrative completely distorts the religious
history of the Philippines. Worse yet, if taken as the last word, it
ensures that the kind of ecumenical and interfaith collaboration

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D.P. MCCANN 237
actually emerging at the grassroots level in the Diaspora—as exhibited
in the Mission for Migrant Workers—may never successfully be
transplanted to the homeland. I don’t believe that Dr. Ruiz actually
meant to dismiss the legacy of over 400 years of Spanish Catholicism
and its impact on the basic religious and cultural identity of the Filipino
people. I’ve quoted him at length to show that his thinking was focused
instead on the institutions that form the bulk of his ATS constituency,
which are overwhelmingly Protestant. Nevertheless, there’s a larger
world of graduate theological education in which the continued
presence of Catholic institutions is massive, both quantitatively and
qualitatively. If we are serious in allowing (racialized and gendered)
Diaspora experiences to renew and inform our struggles for social
justice and human authenticity, we can ill afford to ignore whatever
opportunities there may be for an outreach and collaboration that is
genuinely ecumenical and interfaith. I imagine that Dr. Ruiz and I are
in deep agreement on this point.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Dennis Patrick McCann is Wallace M. Alston Professor of Bible and Religion at Agnes
Scott College in Atlanta/Decatur, Georgia, USA.

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Integral Liberation in
U.S. Theological Education:
Is It Possible?

Mark Lewis Taylor

I
t is a delight to offer this informal response to Dr. Ruiz’s informed
and challenging essay, “Recovering the ‘Body Politic’.” His years
of teaching and ministry—from Princeton Theological Seminary,
to the faculty and administration at New York Theological Seminary,
and now to a directorship at the Association of Theological Schools in
the US and Canada—make him an important voice. This all becomes
even more significant when one notes, as in his essay, how committed
Ruiz is to justice in constructing knowledge and empowerment in
the US theological education. This is not an easy road. Many in US
theological education will admit that there are problems in achieving
racial and gender justice in our institutions, but they work with little
sense of urgency on the matter, believing that “progress is being
made.” Ruiz, while acknowledging this progress to a certain degree,
raises more fundamental and radical questions. I join him in that kind
of concern, and will seek to respond in that vein myself. In short, I
begin with an assumption, which I hope to argue throughout, that
U.S. theological education is still far from what it can and should be
when it comes to both teaching and practicing racial and gender justice
(which are not unconnected from the still pervasive neocolonial and
imperial posture of Christian religion in the U.S.1).
First, let me commend Dr. Ruiz’s paper for its acumen in
contemporary theory. Ruiz’s work puts on display the truth that
vigorous advocacy for justice in theological education need not

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M.L. TAYLOR 239
disparage theory—even theory coming out of European settings. Ruiz
also works theoretically, though, across what Walter Mignolo terms
“the colonial difference,” taking a helpful decolonizing, postcolonial—I
would say, “counter-colonial”—approach to theoretical treatment of
political issues today. I have not the space here to engage in discussion
with him on the many figures that I, too, value, which he invokes here:
Michel Foucault, Giorgio Agamben, Jean-Luc Nancy, Michael Omi
and Howard Winant, Susan Harding, Patricia Hill Collins, and many
more! I applaud this matrix of theory because all too often, at least in
US circles, our concerns with liberation and justice are worked out
with a hermeneutics of outrage and denunciation, which, however
justifiable and important (indeed!), often go without a necessary
theoretical mediation. Radical advocacy of justice and liberation in
theological institutions will require careful thinking if it is to be saved
from naive progressivism and mere Left-posturing.
In my response here, I will limit myself to commenting on just
three points bearing on Ruiz’s important essay. First, I want to simply
underscore the issue of race, the constructed character of which Ruiz
especially emphasizes. Here, I will show how the constructs of race
and gender/sex are still shoring up a largely white and male subject-
position in US theological education and how this, in turn, is also
intrinsic to US imperial formation. My second and third points are
responses to two key questions that Ruiz raises toward the end of
his paper: [a] What is an “authentically transformative Christianity?”
and [b] What role might accredited theological education play within
such a transformative Christianity? Thus, my second section treats the
notion of “integral liberation” as my way of saying what “authentic
and transformative Christian faith” is. The third and final section
returns to what I see is US theological education needing to become
in light of all this.

THE CONSTRUCT OF RACE



Ruiz writes, “the burden of this entire essay has been to insist, “we
should stop thinking of race ‘as an essence, as something fixed, concrete
and objective. . .” [and] instead think of ‘race as an unstable and
‘decentered’ complex of social meaning constantly being transformed
. . . by political struggle….”. I underscore the importance of making a
case for that insistence, as Ruiz does in his essay. Over my 25 years of
teaching in US theological education, I find it continually important

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240 INTEGRAL LIBERATION IN U.S. THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION
to challenge the construct of “race,” i.e. to teach that it is a construct,
not a given descriptor of human biology or being. Indeed, it is true,
that as a construct, it has had, and continues to have, many social and
political consequences. It may be a construct, an illusory one; but it
is also hurtful, divisive, vicious. Racism begins with a construct of
race, the invention of the idea that color of skin, physiognomy and
human physical features can be used to assign worth and dignity to
human groups, such that a hierarchy of humans can be developed.
Racism is the structural functioning of this vicious construct, and it
has a powerful function even when we individual whites proclaim
our pure intentions. Omi and Winant’s definition of “racism” is a
helpful one for summing up the way the construct is used: “racism
is the routinized outcome of practices that create or reproduce hierarchical
social structures based on essentialized racial categories.”2 Racism is not
just personal prejudice; more importantly it is the routinized outcome
of these structural practices. Racial marking and its constructs are
now so deeply etched into white communities, in the US, Europe
and elsewhere, that whites (and others, too) often are unconscious of
the constructed character of race, and hence of their own racialized
assumptions about humanity and knowledge.
The power of racial constructs, and the way it undergirds a cross-
generational political culture of whiteness, is still evident in U.S.
higher education. U.S. higher education in theology often likes to see
itself as championing academic freedom. With respect to gender and
race, however, our institutions are all too often, still, controlled spaces.
They are controlled not only by ideals and standards of excellence, the
famous “canons of scholarship,” but also by certain understandings of
those standards and styles of upholding them. The most powerful
understandings and styles of these standards and their application
have been those that historically circulated among groups that long
have had control over the more powerful institutions of theological
education. In the history of the US, these most powerful groups have
largely been of various European and US extraction and are white
(and male, as we shall see), with all the entitlements and privileges
that scholars know, or should know, attached thereto.3
It might be helpful to look at some numbers. I am relying on
figures compiled by the American Theological Society (ATS) on race
and gender in theological education, and I’ll work “upward,” from
U.S. M.Div. programs, to the doctoral programs, and then to full-time
faculty. The statistics here I have gathered quickly and no doubt they
need to be worked further, interpreted from various angles. I am open

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M.L. TAYLOR 241
to counter readings and interpretations. Nevertheless, I am sure they
have a force that we need to reflect upon.
Consider, first, U.S. M.Div. students. Out of the 31,128 total
M.Div. students enrolled in Fall of 2009 in the US, a full 63 percent of
them are white, 16 percent are African-American, six percent Asian-
American, three to four percent US Hispanics, and less than one
percent Native American. All these students of color, as a group, now
make up 27 percent of all US M.Divs.4 Regarding women as a group,
they constitute 42 percent of all M.Div. students.
At the Ph.D. level in all US theological schools of the ATS, a
Fall 2009 headcount shows that 56 percent of all doctoral students
are white, with African-Americans down to five percent, Asian-
Americans six percent, US Hispanics three percent, and again Native
Americans less than 1 percent. Here the representatives of minoritized
groups represent only 15 percent of doctoral students, this percentage
being significantly lower than minoritized members representation in
the M.Div. pool (where, recall, they made up 27 percent of the whole
group). Women as a group, though, remain at the level of 42 percent
of all Ph.D. students.
It is at the faculty level, where the disparities of gender and racial/
ethnic profiles in theological education are more strongly marked.
In 2009 of all the tenured professors in the ATS schools of the US,
a full 84 percent of them were whites, seven percent of all tenured
faculty were African-American, five percent Asian-American, and
three percent US Hispanic-Latino/a. In other words, only 15 percent
of tenured faculty in the U.S. are from racial/ethnic groups. Only 25
percent, one quarter, among all tenured faculty members, are women.
If one looks at just the full professors across U.S. theological
schools, then whites edge up to an even higher percentage, 87 percent
of all full professors. African-Americans are six percent, Asian-
Americans and US Hispanics-Latino/as at three percent. Total racial/
ethnic representation among full professors goes down to 12 percent;
the percentage of women goes down to 21 percent.
US theological educators are often quick to point out that these
figures reflect an improved situation of “diversity” in theological
education. Since trends developing in the 1960s and 1970s, U.S.
theological education is a less white and less male place, they say. That
is true, in terms of sheer numbers, but two points should motivate
us to be slow in celebrating the present situation. First, while there
has been a change in numbers, the control of power in theological
education is still firmly in white educators’ hands. The positions of full

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242 INTEGRAL LIBERATION IN U.S. THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION
professors and tenured professors, and of top administrators—this
being where institutional power is largely lodged—still remain held
by those who can invoke white privilege, its cultural tradition(s), and
economic power. This is why the rhetoric of championing “diversity”
in theological education, while necessary, is severely limited if it does
not also talk about “empowerment” for groups traditionally repressed
and excluded from influence in Christian churches and institutions of
the global order.
Second, we should also be slow to congratulate US theological
education for its “diversity” because changes in the demographics of
theological education still fall so far short of the demographic change
in US society. Only the change in women entrants to seminaries,
now, around 45-50 percent of all entrants, comes close to reflecting
the society-wide proportion of women to men (yet, of course, women
moving into positions of pastoral and educational power is another
matter). Especially in terms of the legacy of race and racism, we have
a long way to go. Most striking, perhaps, is that even though the
US demographic features over 15 percent Latinos/as and Hispanics,
these constitute only 3-4 percent of students in M.Div. and doctoral
programs of US theological education, and only about three percent
of faculty. (Today, in the US, there are 45.5 million Hispanics, making
up 15.1 percent of the US population of 301 million.5)
African Americans, while constituting 12-14 percent of the US
population, do better than other groups of color, being nearly 16
percent of all US M.Div. students, but in doctoral programs and the
ranks of faculty, they rarely rise above six percent.
The total number of students in theological education who are
“of color” (Asian-, African-, Latino/a, Native American and others)
remains about one quarter of those in US theological education.
Again, against the backdrop of recent population changes in the U.S.,
this is disappointing. The total number of all non-white groups in
the U.S., previously called “minorities,” is approaching the 50 percent
mark of the US population. It is expected to exceed that level by 2042.6
The remaining greater numbers of whites in theological education,
together with and compounded by their holding even greater numbers of
the power-holding positions, leave US higher education a long way
off from what it should be.
Moreover, this kind of racialization and gender distortion of the
theological academy’s “body politic” only serves to reinforce the US
American imperial and (neo-)colonial project. Here, I might register a
slight demurral with Ruiz’s argument when he says toward the end

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M.L. TAYLOR 243
of his paper that “the point is not to return to the old contestation
about the American imperial and colonial project.” True, if he means
we should not return to the “old contestation”; but because the US
American imperial and colonial project continues to reconstitute itself
anew, our contesting that project is still very much in order. Indeed,
I would read Ruiz’s contestation of the racialized and gendered body
politic as an important way to contest the US imperial and colonial
project. That work is very explicitly going on in cultural studies and
critical theory. One need only recall Ann McClintock’s Imperial Leather:
Race and Sex in the Colonial Contest, Rashid Khalidi’s Resurrecting
Empire: America’s Perilous Path in the Middle East, and many other
sources. As these and other texts show, the racialized and gendered
“body politic” in the US, as manifested in US theological education,
is a constitutive part of a transnational imperial project within which
the US is a key player. In this way, racialized and gendered constructs
are heavy with political and economic consequences. Theological
education is just one of the academic regimes that in the US often fails
to challenge the US colonial/imperial and also often actually gives
expression to it and justifies it.7

TOWARD “INTEGRAL LIBERATION”

From what basis can we challenge such a distorted and destructive


body politic? And how might US theological education be different if
it took this task seriously? Ruiz himself leads us to ask these kinds of
questions toward the end of his essay when he asks, “. . . what are the
conditions under which an authentically transformative Christianity
or religious identity and practice can be articulated, and what is the
role of accredited graduate theological education . . .?”
These questions presuppose that we know what an “authentically
transformative Christianity or religious identity” looks like. Indeed,
what is it? And how might it relate to the problems of racialized and
gendered difference in contemporary US theological education?
Consider, in this section, just the question of an “authentically
transformative Christianity (ATC).” A fully adequate exploration of
such a notion would take us far beyond the scope of this essay, and
I have set forth my understanding of Christian existence in previous
works.8 Here let me use the phrase “integral liberation” to name what
authentically transformative Christianity” is in my understanding.
“Integral liberation,” especially as developed in post-Vatican-II

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liberation theology by Gustavo Gutiérrez, has a number of rich


connotations. The phrase did not originate simply in Gutiérrez’s books
where it, indeed, makes an important appearance in his Theology of
Liberation. More importantly, though, it gives expression to aspirations
and practices already forming in historical practice of Christian
communities. Especially those interested in social justice issues often
formed community groups and organizations to seek una comunidad
integral (“an integral community”), a wholistic approach to group
and individual survival under usually extreme situations of struggle,
exclusion, and repression. This struggle for integral community and
social liberation occurs among disenfranchised groups throughout
the world. Gutiérrez broadens “integral liberation” even further to
name the kind of presence and action that God through Jesus Christ is
said to be doing in the world. To say that this doing is one of “integral
liberation” is to say that there is underway, an act of gratuitousness in
history pressing for a liberation, but one that also seeks new unity. The
liberation sought is one that must not be limited to the personal vs. the
social, the political vs. the spiritual, or thought only in terms of one
vector of oppression, say, racism, class exploitation, gender injustice,
and so on. Rather, “integral liberation” names a fully flowering and
differentiated event of liberation. Of course, such an event is given,
fully, nowhere in history, but that is the event for which and toward
which struggle, dreaming, and devotion are made.
In my work, I have expressed the ideal of “integral liberation”
in the phrase “reconciliatory liberation,” seeking to preserve the
special concerns with radically inclusive love and restoration of all
humanity and creation (that’s the “reconciliatory” part), as integral
to an event of transformation that brings new and freeing structures
of political, social, cultural and personal emancipation (that’s the
“liberation” part). “Liberation” is the aim and goal of ATC, but the
“reconciliatory” qualifier keeps that notion of liberation open, fluid,
ever mindful of the various types of liberation needed, and aware of
the different peoples and groups who suffer its lack. In other words,
it keeps the pursuit of justice, however primary, always qualified by
love. This I take to be the hallmark of Christian being in the world,
this drive for liberation and justice, but always as qualified by a
radically-inclusive love. The tension of such an existence comes to its
most radical form in the call to love the enemy—even the enemy of
liberation. The challenge is to find a way to be militant for liberation
but qualify that militancy with love. Usually that means some kind of
movement toward non-violent direct action and civil disobedience as

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M.L. TAYLOR 245
one tactic or strategy of confrontation.9
It may be asked, why so strong an emphasis on “liberation,” on
insisting that political and structural matters—like those of racial
and gender injustice that Ruiz treats in his essay—are so crucial
to Christian existence? My primary source material for deriving
such a view of ATC comes from a reading of biblical narratives in a
counter-imperial frame.10 The early Jesus movement developed its
teachings on life and spirit in the context of Roman imperial power
and formation. Centuries of Christianity, in both Protestantism
and Catholicism, especially with the imperial establishment
of Constantine, usually set this counter-imperial faith in Jesus
at the margins of official “orthodox” Christianity. Often, the
fact that Christians would be vigorously counter-imperial
was completely ignored. Western scholars in the production of
theological knowledge in the power centers of Europe and the
US have so de-politicized biblical interpretation and theology
that many Christian theologians in the US and Europe would see
a counter-imperial faith in Jesus as unthinkable.11 Yet, precisely
that kind of faith, and the spirit of integral liberation at work
in it, has never been without their witnesses. Yes, it has been
marginalized in the history of the Christian European West. Yes,
counter-imperial faith has often had to go outside of the church,
into other para-ecclesial and community movements in order to
be, paradoxically, faithful to the way of the cross and the rising
of Jesus. Nevertheless, it has also often thrived in marginalized
and oppressed Christian communities. Counter-imperial faith
has not only been part of communities which, in the twentieth
century, embraced “liberation theology” throughout World South
communities, but it can also be seen as at work among the poor
who were first repressed and cast abroad from the shores of
Europe with the rise of the proto-capitalist and capitalist classes.
The Diggers and Levellers are exemplary of such groups. The
writings in this proto-capitalist epoch, by the English preacher,
Gerrard Winstanley, gave expression to this liberatory blend of
the political and the spiritual.12 Better said, it is not so much that
the political and the spiritual are two interests that need to be
blended, but that within the spiritual there is an inseparable bond
of the psychic and the social, the personal and the political. This
inseparable and integral blend is “spirit,” and it marks “spiritual”
practice and “spirituality.”

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246 INTEGRAL LIBERATION IN U.S. THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION

TOWARD ADEQUATE THEOLOGICAL


EDUCATION IN THE U.S.

So this integral liberation, this kind of reconciliatory liberation, is what


I would take authentically transformative Christianity to be? Now,
what might it mean for contemporary US theological education. It
would be preposterous to think that I could even begin to answer this
question, with any fullness, in this concluding section. But in light of
the themes broached by Ruiz’s essay, and my response to it, let me
highlight five spheres of transformative need.
First, there is a need to end the hegemony of European and U.S. white
and male subject-positions in US theological education. I am both white
and male, so I am aware of some of the costs and complications
involved here. I am not saying there is no role in integral liberation
for those of us who are constructed as white, who are from European,
entitled nations, and hence can lay claim, disproportionately, to
numerous patterns of entitlement. But the hegemony, which I have
already shown to be present in US theological education, needs to
be envisioned as ending. And the end of that hegemony needs to be
brought into being. With a church whose vitality and strength is in
the World South, and whose vibrant churches, even in the US, are
from the many different cultures and communities throughout the
world, the US theological institutions’ being mired in patterns of
exclusion of those groups and of continuing to reinforce white power
structures, is inexcusable, intolerable, unjust.
What needs to happen in this area of transformative need? We
need what is all too rarely performed: the proactive planning for
full and varied representation of under-represented groups in ways
that make likely the achievement of equality of empowerment US
theological institutions—for students, faculty, and administrators.
Such proactive planning should not be seen as only done “for the sake
of” presently minoritized groups (e.g. Latinos/as, Asian-Americans,
African-Americans, Arab-Americans, indigenous nations’ peoples
and more). The empowerment is for those groups, yes, but also, especially,
for the strengthening of the entire life of any theological institution. The
efforts for empowerment of traditionally excluded groups are, in fact,
ways to enliven the poly-cultural and multi-perspectival lineaments
that strengthen the entire institution’s teaching, research, and
common life.
Achieving something like this would mean making sure that

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M.L. TAYLOR 247
there is not just a token scholar of color, or a token woman of any
background, in each of the Departments of a theological institution.
There would, instead, be careful planning toward numeric density of
representation among women faculty and among faculty of color who
represent the major minoritized constituencies in the US. Women and
scholars of color would be included at the ranks of both the tenured
and untenured, and also, among the tenured, they would be present
at the levels of both associate and full professor. (Unfortunately, it is a
standard pattern of theological education that if and when it diversifies, it
does so largely at the positions and ranks of least power for influencing
the whole institution.13) Moreover, undertaking all that I have
mentioned in this paragraph requires maintaining an environment
that is hospitable and equally empowering for all groups, students,
faculty, administrators, staff, especially traditionally minoritized
members in those sectors of institutional life. My own faculty has
a special challenge because, barring unforeseen circumstances, our
9-plus member Theology Department, traditionally a very important
one at my protestant theological institution, will by next year be
staffed by all white tenured scholars.
In pressing for all these changes, I have also learned that one needs
to proactively guard the gains in diverse empowerment that have
already been made in our institutions. All too often, when planning
to improve “diversity,” by struggling for new hires or more diverse
recruitment strategies, institutions seem to retrench somewhere else
in their system, letting previously recruited scholars and students
of color go or be neglected. Previous gains are lost as new ones are
attained. The result, then, is another case of “change” that keeps the
old imbalance of power in place.
I know that this transformative need, as I have articulated it here
is demanding, but nothing less will be able to counter the insidious
powers of racialized and gendered constructs as they work their way
throughout our pedagogies, our doctrinal discussions, our church
leadership theories and our spiritualities and moral practice. It will
not do to seek only ever smarter or nicer white people (which often
seems to be the reigning assumption).
Second, the issue of the US imperial and US colonial—both as past
legacy and present structuring reality—needs to be taken more seriously
than they are at present in theological education. Imperial and colonial
formations need to be seen not just as “political history,” which they
are, but also as features of the present fallen condition of humanity, of
sin (“institutionalized violence,” “institutionalized sin”), so that they

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248 INTEGRAL LIBERATION IN U.S. THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION
can be seen as the antithesis of the grace that comes through Christ.
This would be to set imperial and colonial formations as problematic
for the heart of Christian existence. Examples of Christian faith taking
the problem of US coloniality to heart can be found in the recent
Accra Confession. It is especially evident in the Manila statement,
“An Ecumenical Faith Stance against Global Empire for a Liberated
Earth Community.”14
This means teaching the gospel of liberation, seriously. By
seriously, I mean refusing to be satisfied with teaching the liberation
theologians of the world in North American theology courses as if they
were but one controversial, isolated option. They are often included
in the episteme of North American theological academies as “local”
or “contextual” kinds of theology, while “real” or “classical” theology
is largely European and white male theology (though not named as
such!). Unfortunately, this is still the dominant approach. I am not
calling here for a simple reduction of the gospel to some narrow
political agenda. I am calling for a positioning of the oppression/
liberation distinction at the heart of the gospel of integral liberation,
and in a way that is not afraid to name the devastating consequences
of the US imperial and the need to find ways free from it. That will
require a new form of pedagogy and thematic content for North
American theological education.
Third, the gospel of liberation should be taught in our seminaries, and
elsewhere, as a complex phenomenon, one that thus demands the best of
theoretical analysis, as well as outrage over injustice and exclusion. Without
theory, as I stressed before, the gospel of liberation loses its cogency
and force. The gospel of liberation is not a homogeneous gospel; it
emerges differently in different contexts, and it is always having to
take account of the ways oppression masks itself, morphs into ever
new forms, assembling class, race, sex, gender, language and national
ideology for ever-new complex means of exploitation. This all calls for
a new collaboration between theologians and ethicists in theological
institutions with university studies; also this required rigorous public
reflection wherever it occurs.
Fourth, and growing out of liberation thought’s necessary complexity,
our discourses about the US imperial in a gospel of liberation should move
beyond traditional Left language, which focuses largely on issues of powerful
US military brinkmanship, nationalism or transnational class dynamics,
and often less on how constructs of race, class and gender also constitute and
strengthen the US imperial. The traditionally Left issues are crucial and
should not be neglected. I would surely not call for any diminution

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M.L. TAYLOR 249
of our critique of US militarist, nationalist and economic exploitation,
since those critiques, too, are often neglected. But it is time to bring,
more rigorously and emphatically than heretofore, gender/sexuality
and white racism into relation with those issues so intrinsic to the US
imperial. I can give one example of what I mean from the fine way
the Manila statement on US empire addresses the issue of sexual and
gender injustice:

Patriarchy and empire are inextricably interwoven. Today we see, in addition to


the complex oppression of women through the ideology and practice of imperial
patriarchy, the vicious use of rape and violence against women as a military tactics of
domination. . . Such brutal military aggression against women and girls is one of the
signs of a deep and pervasive system of domination that extends to all dimensions of
human life. The gender ideology of patriarchy is pivotal in all domination hierarchies
in human society and in the communities of all living beings.15

Other connectors between patriarchal ideology and imperial


practice would include the ways nations that are subject to colonial
and imperial forces have been feminized as a whole, its men taken
as less than “manly” by Western constructs, its women often hyper-
sexualized and used for colonizers’ own ends. As McClintock has
shown, eloquently and rigorously, the very lands and cultures of
the colonized have been viewed as “female” and hence—according
to colonizers’ imaginaries—colonizable, in need of control and
domination. Women have been, as she notes, “the boundary markers
of empire.”16 This reinforces the ways empires mark out peoples for
colonization, adding the powers of gendered and sexualized fantasy
to the racist imaginary, enabling both race and sex/gender to make
stronger the ideologies and practices of the US imperial.”17
Fifth, and to conclude with practical comments on the institutional
enforcement of all this, the agencies that accredit theological institutions
in North America need to more vigorously withhold accreditation and
impose citations on especially the most powerful schools. At present the
well-meaning and knowledgeable accreditors have a power vis-à-vis
the larger theological institutions in the US, which is similar to the
limited powers of the UN vis-à-vis the United States. It is a power
to lament, advise, and counsel, but rarely a power to really sanction
and transform fundamentally abusive practices. This is especially
the case if we recall figures I gave above about the racial/ethnic and
gendered make up of powerful faculty positions in US theological
schools. Accreditors do address the issues of racial and gender
disparities, even withholding accreditation or imposing citations,

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250 INTEGRAL LIBERATION IN U.S. THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION

but usually when dealing with the smaller, less powerful North
American schools. Also, the powerful schools do receive citations
from time to time, but to my knowledge, this happens mainly for
failings of a more general, often vaguer sort: deficient “assessment
processes,” “communication dynamics,” “faculty governance,”
and so on. To be honest, I am not quite sure about the reasons for
this limited power of accreditors when it comes to challenging the
powerful schools for failing to address racial and gender injustice in
the make up of their faculty and student constituencies. Is it a failure
of will by accreditors? Is it due to large financial resources that the
bigger schools give to the accrediting agencies? Are the accreditors,
as evaluators of North American theological institutions, themselves
paid—directly or indirectly—by the ones they are evaluating? Again,
I am not sure. But whatever the reason, I am still waiting for some
accrediting body to say to the powerful theological academies of
North America, something like the following:

Look, everyone ... international society shows a US imperial formation that has scarred
badly the global body politic. U.S. military brinkmanship, its support of a transnational
elite classes, continuing protection of white, male cultural values and Euroamerican subject-
positions—this all, must be named, reflected upon, and resisted. From this perspective, the
present constitution of faculties in the U.S., where tenured faculty remain 85 percent white
and only 25 percent women, with institutional interests still leaning more toward Europe and
less toward those of the poorer World South—all this, as well, is unconscionable. The South
and its constituencies are within the U.S., and it is time that their voices, their leaders and
their theologies be made central to theological training in the U.S. The need to change from
the present structure has been evident to many throughout the world for too long.
Therefore, we as accreditors, in good conscience, can no longer deem your schools to be
worthy of accreditation. They are fundamentally lacking in showing the structure necessary
for teaching and training ministers in the present age. There needs to be a fundamental
“changing of the subject”—of the subject-positions of those doing the teaching and curricular
building, and of the subject-matter that so often ignores the racialized and gendered U.S.
imperial ideology and practice.

I will end my commentary on this final transformative need by simply


asking: who will dare to utter words like these, and seek to implement
them? Who among us will support such an implementation? In the
spirit of the gospel of liberation that still graces the lives of many
communities, in spite of brutal failures and seemingly intransigent
structures, I can work in hope for powers of change to grow in all of us
toward an emancipatory future—even for US theological education.
We are all in Professor Ruiz’s debt for having the courage and
complexity of analysis to keep the issues of racial and gender injustice

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M.L. TAYLOR 251

at the centers of our attention. Failing to do so risks creating an


institutional network of theological schools that seem ashamed of the
gospel of liberation. Against the specter of such a failure, Ruiz’s essay,
however, is yet another sign of the historical unfolding of a gospel
of liberation, as another specter that haunts our troubled present, as
those long excluded by the racialized and gendered US imperial dare,
still, to weigh-in with new power and new life for all.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mark Lewis Taylor is Professor of Theology and Culture at Princeton Theological


Seminary.

ENDNOTES
1
See Mark Lewis Taylor, Religion, Politics and the Christian Right: Post-9/11 Powers
and U.S. Empire (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2005).

2
Howard Winant, The New Politics of Race: Globalism, Difference, Justice
(Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2004), 126.

3
On the critical study of whites and “whiteness,” see Richard Delgado and Jean
Stefanic, Critical White Studies (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 199), and
Zeus Leonardo, Race, Whiteness and Education (NY: Routledge, 2009).

4
The numbers do not add up to 100 percent because I am leaving out the percentages
of international students, and an “unreported” category that has its own percentage.
I am deriving these percentages of women and racial/ethnic groups at ATS schools,
and those that follow, by using my calculator on data gathered by the ATS in its
“2009/2010 Annual Data Tables,” at http://www.ats.edu/Resources/Publications/
Documents/AnnualDataTables/2009-10AnnualDataTables.pdf. You are invited to
check my figuring of these percentages.

5
US Census Bureau Press Release, “An Older and More Diverse Nation by
Midcentury, press release of August 14, 2008. For the entire release, http://www.
census.gov/newsroom/releases/archives/population/cb08-123.html .

6
Ibid.

7
I have analyzed the role of Christian religious life in justifying US imperial power in
an earlier book, Religion, Politics and the Christian Right.

8
The Executed God, and Religion, Politics and the Christian Right, and Remembering
Esperanza.

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252 INTEGRAL LIBERATION IN U.S. THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION
9
The notion of “reconciliatory emancipation” or “reconciliatory liberation,” is developed
in Remembering Esperanza, 175-93. On the approach to nonviolent direct action,
through Christian dramatic action as part of the “way of the cross,” see Taylor, The
Executed God, 99-126

10
Mark Lewis Taylor, “Spirit,” in The Blackwell Companion to Political Theology, eds.
Peter Scott and William T. Cavanaugh (New York and London: Blackwell, 2004),
377- 92.

11
On this “de-politicization” in biblical and theological scholarship, see Richard
A. Horsley, Jesus and Empire: The Kingdom of God and the New World Disorder
(Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2002), 1-14.

12
On the Diggers, Levellers and Winstanley’s writings, see Peter Linebaugh and
Marcus Rediker, The Many-Headed Hydra: Sailors, Slaves, Commoners and the
Hidden History of the Revolutionary Atlantic (Boston: Beacon Press, 2000), 80-99.

13
On difficulties faced by faculty of minoritized groups in transitioning from non-
tenured to tenured ranks, see Diversity in Theological Education – A Folio, Association
of Theological Schools, especially its section, “How Racial/Ethnic Faculty often
Experience Rank, Promotion and Tenure Decisions in ATS Institutions.” Available at
http://www.ats.edu/Resources/Documents/DiversityFolio.pdf .

14
For this statement, see “Empire,” special issue of Reformed World, 56 (4),
December 2006, pages 433-50.

15
“An Ecumenical Faith Stance against Global Empire for a Liberated Earth
Community,” 437-438.

16
McClintock, 30-37.

17
In addition to McClintock on both race and sex in imperial formation, on racism’s
role in colonization, see Jürgen Oesterhammel, Colonialism: A Theoretical Overview
(Kingston, Jamaica: Ian Randle Pub., 2000), 108

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


NOTES
The Catalogue of
Small Things

Compiled Responses From


Rowena Tiempo Torrevillas
J. Neil C. Garcia
By
Ian Rosales Casocot

F
irst we begin with “Bonsai,” perhaps the best known and most-
loved poem by the National Artist for Literature Edith Lopez
Tiempo:

All that I love


I fold over once
And once again
And keep in a box
Or a slit in a hollow post
Or in my shoe.

All that I love?


Why, yes, but for the moment—
And for all time, both.
Something that folds and keeps easy,
Son’s note or Dad’s one gaudy tie,
A roto picture of a beauty queen,
A blue Indian shawl, even
A money bill.

It’s utter sublimation,


A feat, this heart’s control
Moment to moment
To scale all love down
To a cupped hand’s size,

Till seashells are broken pieces

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256 THE CATALOGUE OF SMALL THINGS
From God’s own bright teeth,
And life and love are real
Things you can run and
Breathless hand over
To the merest child.

Dr. Tiempo’s daughter, the poet Rowena Tiempo Torrevillas writes me today:

I just spent the afternoon with a scholar from De La Salle University


[Bam Pe] who’s doing a biography of Mom and needed to interview
her and me, as a part of her research. So I guess I’m still in that family-
history groove even as I write this.
I glanced with interest at your exegesis of Mom’s “Bonsai”—
which has turned out to be her best-known poem because of its
emotional accessibility. As you, and other readers, have perhaps
noted about Mom’s work, much of her poetry—especially the earlier
stuff—tended to be dense and cerebral. Among her poems in the
first volume, “Tracks of Babylon,” my personal favorite—and that
of the committee that chose her to be the first Elisabeth Luce Moore
Distinguished Asian Professor—was a poem whose lyricism was
quite distinct from the other weightily intellected poems in that
volume. I’m referring to “Mid-Morning for Sheba,” which, if you and
your students are not familiar with it, is well worth looking up and
learning.
Following are some personal references embedded in the imagery
of “Bonsai.” It’s absolutely not necessary to know “what Mom
meant” when she chose those objects as signifiers of “all [I] love.”
Objects, really, that had meaning for her as mementoes of family joy
and pain. (I note that in the analysis you quote from Myrna, there
is some speculation about the personal importance of those objects.)
Well, here is the background, straight from one who was right there
when the poem was written:
... “[S]on’s note” refers to a letter full of anger and resentment that
my brother had written to my parents; when he was being chastised
for some misdeed he had committed, Don set fire to my father’s books
and wrote a letter to “the man in the red car” ... meaning Dad, who
was identified with the red Ford Falcon that was our family sedan for
years. As far as I know, that’s the only letter my brother ever wrote
our parents, growing up or after he’d left home.
... “Dad’s one gaudy tie” is a necktie in loud colors that some of
Dad’s students had given him as a birthday present (and which Mom
apparently had mixed feelings about; Dad never wore it).

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R.T. TORREVILLAS, J.N.C. GARCIA, AND I.R. CASOCOT 257
... The “Indian shawl” was a gift brought to Mom from India,
in blue-and-gold embroidery, by their old teacher from Iowa, Paul
Engle, when he was on a Rockefeller tour of Asia and he stopped by
Dumaguete to visit the Writers’ Workshop across the world, which
his students Ed and Edith had grown from the Iowa “seed corn” that
they’re brought to Silliman from the University of Iowa. It was a gift
much treasured for its symbolic import, as well as for its inherent
value.
... The “roto picture of a young queen” is ... yours truly, a reference
to my salad days as Hara sa Lalawigan.
So there you have it, the inside story behind the objects in “Bonsai.”
And if anyone ever comes upon these facts and finds them useful in
the literal understanding of this much-loved poem ... well, the story
came from me.
One of my own life’s greatest treasures is the time when Mom and
I were asked to lecture at Ateneo. (I think it was there where I gave
the very first version of “My Parents’ Child.”) When we were done,
they asked her to recite or read a poem, and asked her to do “Bonsai.”
There was absolute silence in that large lecture hall as she opened the
book and read it.
I looked around the fully-packed hall, where some of the students
were overflowing into the hallway, sitting on the floor or looking
in from the windows. (And this was before she was conferred as
National Artist!)
As Mom was reading the poem aloud, all the lips of the audience
were moving silently along with the words she was reading. All of
them in the audience knew that poem by heart.

The poet J. Neil C. Garcia writes:

Poems are strange in that they are intimately intersubjective, especially


when they are read across a significant “sweep” of time. Contrary to
the evidence, they really do have their own agency as works of art,
and this becomes all the clearer when one engages them at different
points in one’s life: because poems are built as much on absence as on
presence, they are never completely exhausted in any one reading.
And so, they open up and offer distinct entry-points to one’s earnest
inquiry, each of them revealing the deep personal space—we might
also say, the spiritual distance—that one has traveled since the last
visit. We often speak of writers as companion spirits, but I also think
it’s possible to speak of companion poems, those that accompany us

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258 THE CATALOGUE OF SMALL THINGS

as we plug along our respective paths; those that (as the local proverb
counsels) bid us turn around and look back, every now and then, lest
we lose not only our way, but also, alas, our very self (because without
hindsight there is no memory, and where there is no memory, there
is no sameness from one moment to the next; which is to say, there is
no identity).
This is one of the few Filipino poems that I can say have
accompanied and “stayed” with me through the various and often
tortuous periods in my continuing apprenticeship to the written
word. The lived moment in the poem, which this annotation now so
wonderfully affirms, was what struck me about it, from the very start.
Already, then, I wondered what the poem’s “antecedent scenario”
(Vendler’s terminology) might be: what is the experience that
prompts this speech (which is the same thing as the poem) into being?
In particular, where (at least emotionally speaking) might the speaker
be, at the exact moment that she (a mother, a wife, a believer) begins
to speak? These questions serve to accentuate the fact that art, while
merely an imitation of life, is nonetheless also rooted inexorably in it...
up to now, these are the questions I still ask my students to answer
for themselves, before they can credibly recite—actually, before they
can endeavor to do anything at all to—this poem. Just now, I’m
remembering that my interest in the representational power of this
text coincided with my fascination with its concise and paradoxical
use of imagery, most astonishingly exemplified, to my mind, in the
simultaneously mundane and divine metaphor of sea shells as “God’s
own bright teeth”... needless to say, from the get-go “bonsai” struck
me as referring wonderfully to sundry objects and realities in the
world (ah, the inventory of loved mementos!) which, like the singular
poem that it is, it not only captures in the “best words” arranged in
the “best order,” but also thereby generously transfigures…
And still, after all these years, the poem keeps giving and giving,
conversing with this restless reader and bringing to light not only its
own interleaving, latent, and undiscovered meanings, but also, more
surprisingly, his own implicit understanding... Given, I suppose, my
recent interest in the self-reflexive gestures that constitute all art,
when I read this poem nowadays I no longer just see the life that
the words encourage me to interiorly, as it were,” visualize.” I still
see the representational content of the poem, true; but I also now see
the words that are the poem, I see the poem as a poem, constituted
not of any pregiven but of a willed kind of painstakingly fashioned
language (just now I’m thinking not only of the careful arrangement

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R.T. TORREVILLAS, J.N.C. GARCIA, AND I.R. CASOCOT 259
of lines and stanzas, but also of the poet’s unusual and possibly
culturally resonant use of the transitive form of the verb “run,” in the
poem’s last strophe, that itself seemingly runs the poem along to its
memorable conclusion), referring to elements within itself, referring
to the idea of its own making, referring to “bonsai” not only as an
external and aegis-forming reference but also as the very structure
that the poem itself mimics (for look at how figuratively vast and
yet how small and unassuming the poem is!)—to the bonsai that the
poem itself is!
So, yes, nowadays, when I read/teach this poem, the poem is at
once the frame as well as the picture that it continues to beautifully
show—pointing all at once to life and to the idea of a life. In particular
(thanks to my recently acquired knowledge of oriental art) pointing
to the aesthetic precept or theory, identifiably Japanese, of wabi-sabi:
the “beauty” of the imperfect, the partial, and the fugitive, which is
what art/poetry, finally is; which is what we all, finally, are.

Rowena Tiempo-Torrevillas responds:

Thank you, Neil, for your most thoughtful assessment of the self-
reflexive element implicit in the act of writing. I, too, am a believer
in the notion of “absence as presence” as a powerful force in writing.
What is poetry, after all, but an expression of the human wish
to enact, and give shape to, “all I love”? Like you, I have been
more interested of late in the interplay between word and thought,
especially in the transaction going on between the individual brain
and written language. Here’s a poem I wrote, oh maybe a decade ago.
I don’t write long poems any more, so it’s not representative of what
I do these days, but here it is. Not counting the compound words, in
a hundred words or less ... a bonsai of one of my own life’s enduring
mysteries:

The Lost Letter

I write to find it.


I’d seen it in my newborn
Daughter’s eyes,
Like looking into
Deep space, deciphering
The dazzle of the infinite-before-life.

I learn a word, ylem, primordial


Substance all elements derive from.

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260 THE CATALOGUE OF SMALL THINGS
(Salt, amino acids, water:
Tears.) We shed protein when we weep.

The Ur-song drifts


Around sleep’s edges,
Encoded in DNA: that hidden letter,
The body’s cryptograph unlocking
Words, which ride through optic currents,
Liquid, electrical, being
Read. Symbol to word,

Loops-and-whorls on fingertips
Are secret maps, ideographs, a lost
Alphabet transcribing
Humanness, as on bark
From the tree
Yggdrasil, where
Our names were
First inscribed.

J. Neil C. Garcia responds:

Thanks, Rowena, for this unexpected boon! Life itself is the mystery,
and as long as we are inside it, we cannot be expected to fully know what
it is. And yet, and yet... There are these “intimations” (Wordsworth’s
entirely fortunate and enduring term) that glimmer in all the dappled
and fugitive shapes that surround us... We have another baby in the
family, my sister’s newborn, and it’s endlessly fascinating to think
of “where” she is, just now that she still exists outside language, just
now that she still doesn’t have the self-consciousness that language
bequeaths to (sometimes, I’m inclined to say, inflicts upon) the
subject, that precisely “selves” the self in a sentence in which the
speaker and the spoken cannot ever fully coincide... As I tell my
students, channeling Lacan, the “I” who speaks in our discourse
cannot exhaust what we are; cannot make us fully present, despite
our well-meant faith that it does (in the first place, unlike the person
who inscribes, once written down the inscription cannot quite change,
cannot quite die). This makes for a truly humbling “lesson” for any
poet (whose claim to the examined life is, after all, nothing if not the
“physical” medium that language is)... But then, as this present poem
shows, perhaps poets already understand this basic inadequacy—
this irremediable gap between sign and reference, between sign and
concept, between sign and sign, between sign and sign-maker, which
is probably why they choose to write poetry to begin with. Poetry, a

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R.T. TORREVILLAS, J.N.C. GARCIA, AND I.R. CASOCOT 261
“making” in which presence is nothing if not absence (and vice-versa);
a willed human act which gestures, again and again, to the silence
from which everything first stirred into existence, to the immemorial
which underlies the historical, the knowable, the known...
On the other hand, despite registering this possible
“disenchantment,” there is an act of faith in this poem that I feel links
it most vitally to “Bonsai.” Mom Edith’s famous poem insists upon the
power of intelligence to capture, shape, and discipline the makeshift
moment, and yet it concludes on the memorable note that human
affection is, quite possibly, the only way this “beautiful fugacity” can
be undone (or, at the very least, invalidated)... I am referring, here, to
the image of a mother—whose consciousness unfolds in interesting
and complex and even mythic movements throughout the poem—
regarding, simply and lovingly, the eyes of her child.
This vacillation between the acceptance of the “limit” imposed
upon us by culture, history, and/or language (a position espoused
most vigorously, in the poetic scene at least, by the American language
guys) and the considered (and recalcitrant) rejection of it is what has
come to characterize, to my mind, the present preoccupation of many
poets. This may have something to do with—among other things—
the increasingly indispensable role that academic critical theory
has come to play in the education and training of many poets who,
nowadays, are required to “do theory” alongside their creative work.
Time and again, I have had occasion to express my own take on this
all-too-real contradiction, most visibly summarized in that strange
hybrid entity of the “poet-critic”... Back in 2009, after spelling out
the irreconcilable differences between these two positions (at a panel
discussion in the Ateneo de Manila), I attempted to articulate my own
argued understanding of the issue... I suppose, just now, I can say that
I still provisionally believe in the way I originally phrased this uneasy
“detente,” back then: “I don’t think poetry transcends culture; I don’t
think poetry transcends language; I don’t think poetry transcends
history. Poetry beautifully encodes the desire for transcendence. This,
for me, is good enough.”
I ended my “spiel” in that panel discussion with these words.
When I said this then, I think I was simply trying to articulate my
position regarding the urgent question of freedom in art.... Reading
all about theory in our classes—in other words, being also, in a
manner of speaking, “critics”—makes us supremely aware of just how
“determined” all our actions, thoughts, and even “imaginations” are
by all these inexorable social forces that surround and yes, constitute

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262 THE CATALOGUE OF SMALL THINGS
and construct us. And yet, despite this “fatal” knowledge, we who
are now effectively “poet-critics” still create works of art, still write
our stories and poems... Obviously, knowing what we know, and
coming from we come from, we can no longer endorse the old liberal
humanist—specifically, romantic—argument that art transcends
materiality. However, while it’s true that the last one hundred
years of merciless social critique has effectively unmasked freedom
as an illusion, it has not by the same token made the necessity of
this illusion well, less “necessary” in our world. What’s left, after a
century of being disabused of the idea that we are essentially free?
The answer is simple: what remains, despite everything, is the desire
for freedom. Poets/artists precisely remain valuable and irreplaceable
in our world because they are the only ones who can “embody” this
necessary longing most beautifully...
Again, Rowena and Ian: thanks for these poems, these notes, these
altogether lovely bonsai moments.

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Additions to the Avifauna of
Bantayan Island, Cebu Province,
Philippines

Abner A. Bucol
Silliman University Angelo King Center for Research and
Environmental Management, Dumaguete City

This paper provides details of seven new bird records for the
Bantayan Island in the northwestern Cebu province: Great Crested
Tern (Sterna bergii), Red-turtle Dove (Streptopelia tranquebarica),
Zebra Dove (Geopelia striata), and Eurasian Tree-Sparrow (Parus
elegans). The latter three species may have arrived most recently
via human aided introductions.

INTRODUCTION

T
he most recent survey on the avifauna of small islands off Cebu
Island was done by Paguntalan et al. (2004). However, Bantayan
Island and its associated islets were not included and no recent
account is available to us, except those listed by Kennedy et al. (2000).
Below is a brief account of new bird records for the Bantayan
Island based on a short visit to the main island (based in Barangay
Ocoy, Sta. Fe on 29-30 April 2011) and the smaller Jilantagaan Island
(visited in the morning of 29 April 2011). Observations were done
with the aid of binoculars (Bushnell 10×50) and the field guide Birds of
the Philippines by Kennedy et al. (2000).

List of new bird records

Whiskered Tern (Chlidonias hybridus)


Not listed by Kennedy et al. (2000) for the Bantayan Island but 3-5

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


264 ADDITIONS TO BANTAYAN ISLAND AVIFAUNA

birds were seen by AB off Sta. Fe wharf on 30 April 2011.

Great Crested Tern (Sterna bergii)


A single bird resting on a buoy near the Ocoy Marine Sanctuary was
seen by AB on 30 April 2011.

Red-turtle Dove (Streptopelia tranquebarica)


A pair perching on bare branches of bagalunga tree (Melia azederach)
within the vicinity of the School of the SEA compound in Ocoy, Sta.
Fe was seen by AB on 29-30 April 2011.

Zebra Dove (Geopelia striata)


Commonly heard in the coconut groves and residential areas of Sta.
Fe town.

Glossy Swiftlet (Collocalia esculenta)


Seen by AB over beach forests and residential areas in Ocoy, Sta. Fe
on 29-30 April 2011.

Barn Swallow (Hirundo rustica)


Seen twice by AB near Jilantagaan Island on 29 April 2011.

Eurasian Tree-Sparrow (Parus elegans)


Common in residential areas and wharf of Sta. Fe.

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Atty. Antonio Oposa Jr., the founder of the Law of Nature
Foundation, for the warm accommodation given to me during my
short visit to Bantayan Island in April 2011.

References

Kennedy, R. S., Gonzales, P. C., Dickinson, E. C., Miranda, H. C. Jr., & Fisher, T. H.
(2000). A guide to the birds of the Philippines. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Paguntalan L. M. J., P. G. C. Jakosalem, Pedregosa, M. G., & Gadiana, M. J. C.


(2004). A study of the birds of small islands off the coast of Cebu Island. Silliman
Journal, 45 (2), 201-221.

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


Restocked Giant Clams
(Family Tridacnidae)
Enhance Community Structure
of a Philippine Coral Reef

Angel C. Alcala
Ely L. Alcala
Silliman University Angelo King Center for Research and
Environmental Management, Dumaguete City

A. C. Cordero
Cantaan Centennial Cooperative
Guinsiliban, Camiguin Province, Philippines

M
ost coral reefs of the Philippines no longer have the full
complement of the seven species of giant clams reported in
the past. The largest species, Tridacna gigas and T. derasa, and
the porcelain clam, Hippopus porcellanus, do not exist on most reefs.
Giant clams on Philippine reefs are few in number and may consist
only of three to four species, namely, T. crocea, T. maxima, T. squamosa,
and H. hippopus.
Only three reef sites in the Philippines with large numbers of giant
clams are known: Bolinao, Pangasinan (Gomez & Belda 1988), Davao
Gulf, and the 5,800 m2 Giant Clam Reserve in Cantaan, Guinsiliban,
Camiguin Island, the subject of the present report. Most of the 2,443
clams in the latter reserve as of 2010 were sexually mature, spawning
naturally in the reserve.
The three T. gigas clams shown in Figure 1 were 7.62 cm when
acquired from the Bolinao Laboratory in 2002, and are now sexually
mature at about 90+ cm in length.
The Giant Clam Reserve is protected and managed by the Cantaan
Centennial Multipurpose Cooperative of Cantaan, Guinsiliban
Municipality, Camiguin Island, Philippines. The members of this
cooperative consist of local residents. Its membership includes young
people active in giant clam conservation (Figure 2).
The restocking of giant clams in the reserve began in 1994. All
clams came from many reef sites on the island, except T. gigas,

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266 RESTOCKED GIANT CLAMS

Figure 1. Six-year old Tridacna gigas (in 2008) in the Cantaan Giant Clam Reserve,
Philippines.

Figure 2. Members of the Cantaan Centennial Multipurpose Cooperative checking their


caged juvenile clams in the reserve. Cages protect the juvenile clams from predators.

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A.C. ALCALA, E.L. ALCALA, AND A.C. CORDERO 267
which came from Bolinao. All giant clam species reported from the
Philippines, except H. porcellanus, are now represented in the Cantaan
Giant Clam Reserve. The initial broodstock of the reserve consisted
of 1,198 individuals belonging to the six species mentioned above.
As of August 8, 2008, 445 juveniles of the six species, which were
spawned in the reserve, have been added to the clam population.
More were spawned later, and 308 T. crocea juveniles were exported
to Guimputlan Marine Reserve in Dapitan City in 2010.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT

Thanks to the Foundation for the Philippine Environment and the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources for their assistance to the project.

Reference

Gomez E.D., & Belda C.A. (1988). Growth of giant clams in Bolinao, Philippines.
In J.W. Copland & J.S. Lucas (Eds.), Giant clams in the Asia and the Pacific
(pp. 178-182). ACIAR Monograph No. 9. Australian Center for International
Agricultural Research, Canberra.

VOL. 52 NO. 1 JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 SILLIMAN JOURNAL


SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1
REVIEW
Ian Rosales Casocot

Beautiful Accidents:
Stories
Manila: University of the
Philippines Press, 2011,
185 pages

Nooks of the Human Heart


Review By Alana Leilani C. Narciso

I
f the stories in Beautiful Accidents: Stories revolved around one
unifying theme, then it could be easier for one to proclaim
conveniently that it is a collection of love stories or of fantasy and
horror, like the writer’s other collection, Heartbreak & Magic (Anvil,
2011). Then it would also allow one to authoritatively say that in
his book, heartbreak does create magic and this magic makes the
heartbreak all the more poignant and lasting. But the stories in Beautiful
Accidents, obstinately refused to be categorized. They are as obstinate
perhaps as accidents: like broken pieces refusing to be pieced together,
offering neither apology nor excuse for their existence.
Set in Dumaguete, the stories are unapologetically real—as real as
the young people playing games, as real as the 19 year old college boy
who hustles for sex and love, as real as the two brothers who each in
their own private journeys, struggles to make the lies they live real and
relevant, as real as the two young men finding themselves, as real as
the mother who recedes into darkened rooms, as real as the defeated
father whose sons are unable to grieve for him, as real as the passion

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272 REVIEW OF BEAUTIFUL ACCIDENTS

and love so generously given, yet unrequited.


In “The Name's not Oscar Wilde,” “Between the Here and the Now,”
and “Private Journeys,” the unfolding of the plot does not keep the
reader’s interest up as much as the revelation of their characters does.
In these stories, one does not follow a clear plot development. As the
stories have proven, the plot is subordinate to the characters themselves
as they provide the revelation and unfolding. Their psychological depth
offers a landscape of events, dreams, and realizations. Each character
is alone in the midst of companionship, unable to surrender altogether
to the possibility of bliss; each searching for that elusive happiness.
Attendant to this is the admission of one's own identity that to be
fully happy is to be wholly honest of who one is. Indeed the stories
(“Private Journeys,” “The Name’s not Oscar Wilde”) seem to run each
on parallel structures: we hear two first person accounts. From their
consciousness we discover their motivations. Central to these stories
is the question of identity and how it is kept hidden. The characters'
existence treads on the delicate balance of discovery and revelation. Yet
in the end, we see promises of discovery and eventual togetherness.
Youth rages, careless, fun-loving, bold in ”Cruising,” ”The Players,”
and “Group Study.” They play dangerous games in the dark, and like
the youth that they are, altogether forget what happens in the dark.
Perhaps the college boy is the only one who seems to be scarred from
the blatant realization that even a high school kid has the right to his
services. In “Group Study,” we are taken back to the hilarity of high
school—how one envied beautiful, bright classmate could have only
possibly slept with the teachers, how the handsomest kid could have
deflowered all the girls in class, how a forbidding teacher was once
a man, and how, at the slightest provocation, one could pounce on a
classmate for an unfavorable remark about a favorite movie star.
In “Pete Sampra’s Neck,” the character nurses a broken heart and
in between the cracks of this heart are how the little details treasured
and shared with the beloved become part of the identity of the lover.
At the center of this remembering that holds the lover's existence is the
persistent truth that the beloved is gone and can never be possessed
again. It is in this truth that the character finally realizes that indeed
“It is like a little death” every time the beloved is remembered. The
whole story climaxed in an accident that figured in front of the lover
whose realizations of the finiteness of love and loving are like the very
debris from the accident he witnessed.
Nowhere is the indulgent narrator in “The Secret Love and Personal
History of Tigulang Liberator of Oriental Negros.” In his stead is a

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A.L.C. NARCISO 273
character who simply tells the forgotten story of a man and the woman
who loved him in sin and secrecy. The longest of the collection, the
story ambitiously details the histories of a town and the liberation of
the island in an era long forgotten. Perhaps what made the tale limited
is the sheer fact that the tale is simply a retelling. Yet again, the writer
so lovingly renders the characters that the sheer power of language
itself imbues life in them.
Inevitably, from the collection, I have picked favorites: “Old
Movies,” “The Hero of the Snore Tango,” and “Things You Don’t
know.” Coincidentally, they are also the stories that won the writer
several Palanca awards. And they are not without weight.
A son grapples with the uncertainty of his identity as there is no
father to speak of; his only identity as it seems lies in the fact that he
looks exactly like the man who everyone thought was his father. The
mother is of no help. She lives in her own world of movies [A reader
would get lost in the constant allusion to movies]. They become the
metaphor for her existence and the varied events of her life. Fittingly,
her life ends like the movies. So we see the son , in the absence of a father
and the detachment of the mother, living his own life and forging an
identity different yet not exclusively separate from the parents’ lives.
The story nears its end as the mother (looking like Ali McGraw), dying
for the second time—for she is long dead—asks the son for time so she
can be the mother he does not have.
This parent-child theme is repeated in “The Hero of the Snore
Tango.” It is the father this time that fades into oblivion leaving the
sons and the wife behind. Yet life, as the writer so well depicted has
a way of making us face our ghosts and dead. The father returns and
attempts to reach out. This, as the narrator sees, is a futile endeavor.
In the end, it takes death for the father to be reconciled to his son as
the son dances the tango on his grave hoping that it is “the closure by
which we could finally love, with all our heart, our dearly departed.”
Like in “Old Movies,” the writer uses death, the ultimate barrier
that separates us as the very thing that would ultimately bring us
together to forgiveness and loving. Quite an irony, yes, but the writer
will have it no other way. Death, as the story goes, is the only logical
ending that will save, albeit rather late, a parched and wounded heart.
The writer achieves, if I may be so presumptuous as to claim, not
only sophistication in language and content—for all his stories are
sophisticated down pat—but also a profundity that speaks to everyone
in “Things You Don’t Know.” As families struggle to live—the same
way friends face the fact of possibly losing their jobs and take to

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274 REVIEW OF BEAUTIFUL ACCIDENTS
shopping as a means to refuse to feeling down (“Yeah, Baby...”)—the
narrator lives and plans every day despite the imminent breakdown of
the family's finances and very possibly of her marriage. The husband
lies, she plays pretend, and the little girl insists she is an angel. Yet, it
is this very stubborn insistence of the little girl that teaches the mother
to forgive and keep faith. It is, in the end, the redemption that the
family needs.
There is a suppleness and gentleness in the writer's language as
the central character affirms loved ones as “secret treasures...that
possess all [we] need to know now in this world. Love, forgiveness,
understanding—all the bright little things easily lost in the rush to live.”
On a personal note, it is interesting that the last three stories I have
mentioned and the best in the collection, are tales where the writer
is nowhere to be found. In fact, “Things You Don’t Know,” which
won him first prize in the Palanca, takes on a character devoid of any
traces of the Ian that I know. T.S. Elliot, though referring primarily to
poetry, might have been right all along: that art is impersonal and the
artist's progress lies in self-sacrifice and the “continual extinction of
personality.”
Finally, the writer paints a Dumaguete I know yet I do not know.
Perhaps it is the power of his prose that transforms the familiar to
something strangely new with its nooks of secret sins, discoveries, loss,
pleasures, and yes, faiths—the stuff of our existence. And the writer—
stubborn as his stories—compels us to look at all these unflinchingly.

ABOUT THE REVIEWER

Alana Leilani Cabrera-Narciso teaches at the Department of English and Literature,


Silliman University.

SILLIMAN JOURNAL JANUARY TO JUNE 2011 VOL. 52 NO.1


Silliman Journal
Volume 52 Number 1 2011

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