Silliman Review Lost in Translation
Silliman Review Lost in Translation
Silliman Review Lost in Translation
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Lost in Translation?
Challenges in Using Psychological
Tests in the Philippines
Allan B. I. Bernardo | 21
READERS Forum
BOOK Review
Ursula K. Le Guin
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
Readers Forum
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
Acknowledgments
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.
Allan B. I. Bernardo
De La Salle University
Manila, 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
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.
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.
After discussing what has been done and what can be done to ensure
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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
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.”
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.”
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.”
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
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....
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
“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.”
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.
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
Aser B. Javier
University of the Philippines—Los Baños
College, Laguna
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.
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)
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.
Case One
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,
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
Case Three
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
Further Analysis
Table 4.
Conclusion
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.
Amatong, J.D. (2005). Local government fiscal and financial management, best
practices. Manila, Philippines: Department of Finance.
Briones, L.M. (n.d.). Local capacity development for MDG localization. UNDP. SNV.
Brown, C.A. (1942). Liebig and After Liebig: A century of progress in agricultural
chemistry. Lancaster, PA: Am. Assoc. Adv. Sci. The Science Press.
Clingermayer, J.C., & Feiock, R.C. (2001). An analysis of political and administrative
adaptations institutional constraints and policy choice: An exploration of local
governance. New York: SUNY Press.
Goldratt, E.M. (1984). Theory of constraints. Great Barrington, MA: North River Press.
Grindle, M.S. (2004). Good enough governance: Poverty reduction and reform
in developing countries. Governance: An International Journal of Policy,
Administration and Institutions, 17, 4, 525-548.
Javier, A.B., & Mendoza, R.R. (2007). Institutional mapping of governance assistance
to local financial planning and management in the Philippines. DANYAG: Journal
of Humanities and Social Science, 12, 1.
Llanto, G., & Gonzalez, E. (2007). Policy reforms and institutional weaknesses:
Closing the gaps. Philippine Institute for Development Studies.
Llanto, G.M, Lamberto, M.B., Manasan, R.G., & Laya, J.C. (1998). Local government
units’ access to the private capital markets. Makati City: Philippine Institute for
Development Studies.
Manasan, R. (2007). IRA design issues. Paper presented to the National Conference
on Strengthening Local Government Finance in the Philippines. Department of
Finance and World Bank Institute. Heritage Hotel, Manila.
Pierre, J., & Rothstein, B. (2008). How should the state behave: The new public
management and the new Weberianism. Working Paper presented at the
conference on “New Public Management and the Quality of Government” at the
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Edna R. Sabater
Institute of Environmental and Marine Sciences, Silliman University,
Dumaguete City, Philippines
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.
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
Direct Effects
Indirect Effects
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.
Irrawaddy dolphin
Figure 1. A model showing potential effects of climate change on tropical, coastal, estuarine and
riverine species of marine mammals.
Acknowledgement
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
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
Family Phocaenidae
Neophocaena phocaenoides
(Indo-Pacific finless porpoise) C WTE,TR VU f ? 8
Family Dugongidae—Dugong
Dugong dugon (Dugong) C TR VU no info ? no info
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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.
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).
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.
It was first decided that only full time fishers will be interviewed and
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.
Response 1 year after the oil spill 2 years after the oil spill
Table 2.
Response Year 2
Period 1 Period 2
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%)
Table 3.
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
About 25% of the fishers were fishing crew (locally called “boso”)
while close to three-fourths (71.43 %) of fisher-respondents had their
Table 4.
Gear Ownership (Do you have your own gear used during fishing?)
Response Year 2
Period 1 Period 2
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%)
Fishing Characteristics
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%)
No answer 1 (2.4%) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total 41 43 41 42 42 37 39 41 39
VOL. 52 NO.1
R.F. SUBADE AND E.J. GALERO 125
Table 6.
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
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 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)
SILLIMAN JOURNAL
127
Table 8.
128
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)
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.
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
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
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129
130 GUIMARAS 2006 OIL SPILL AND FISHERS' CONDITIONS
Cost Structure and Profitability of 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
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
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
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)
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
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).
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
SILLIMAN JOURNAL
133
Table 12.
134
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
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.
Table 13.
Respondents’ Reply When Asked If They Have Other Sources of Income Other Than
Fishing (Year 2, Period 2)
No 19 15 17 51
(42.85%)
Yes 20 26 22 68
(57.14%)
Total 39 41 39 119
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
Total 67 6 0
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)
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
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.
Average Number of Fishing Time Spent on Fishing Before, During, and After Oil Spill
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.
Table 19.
Perceived Usual Catch Before Oil Spill and Two Years After the Oil Spill.
Summary, Conclusion,
and Recommendations
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.
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
ITOPF. (2003). Oil spill effects on fisheries. Technical Information Paper. Retrieved
from http://www.itopf.com/uploads/tip3.pdf
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
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
Methods
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
Environmental Awareness
Table 1.
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.
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
Conclusion
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.
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.
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.
Betty Cernol-McCann
United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia
Hong Kong
Dennis P. McCann
Agnes Scott College
Decatur, GA, USA
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
Theoretical Framework
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.
Demographic Characteristics
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
Discussion
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?
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
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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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
“Theopolitics of (Re)Inscription”
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.
“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…]”
“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
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
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
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 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
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
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
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]
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]
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,
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
Where is Home?
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
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
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).
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
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.
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).
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/
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).
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,
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
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.
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.
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
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.
Dennis Patrick McCann is Wallace M. Alston Professor of Bible and Religion at Agnes
Scott College in Atlanta/Decatur, Georgia, USA.
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
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.
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.
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
F
irst we begin with “Bonsai,” perhaps the best known and most-
loved poem by the National Artist for Literature Edith Lopez
Tiempo:
Dr. Tiempo’s daughter, the poet Rowena Tiempo Torrevillas writes me today:
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
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:
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.
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
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).
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.
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,
Figure 1. Six-year old Tridacna gigas (in 2008) in the Cantaan Giant Clam Reserve,
Philippines.
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.
Beautiful Accidents:
Stories
Manila: University of the
Philippines Press, 2011,
185 pages
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