生活在“别人的手中”:菲律宾移民和留守儿童的不稳定和营利

IF 0.9 Q2 AREA STUDIES
Cheryll Alipio
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引用次数: 5

摘要

在以劳动力、发展和利润最大化为目的的系统性招聘和输出的劳动力中介状态下,菲律宾继续同时将农民工塑造成暂时的、英勇的和牺牲的形象。作为东南亚最大的移民输出国和亚洲第三大汇款接收国,菲律宾将移民视为现代英雄和烈士的话语揭示了民族主义神话和文化价值观的相互作用,以及新自由主义对金融和灵活劳动力的青睐,以培养孝顺的移民,并庆祝流动的资本主义主体,而不是移民的福利和福祉。本文探讨了当代移民劳工的制度化和移民每天生活的制度化不确定性,以调查菲律宾这种深刻的不稳定性是如何在历史上永存的,从而塑造了今天移民及其留守儿童的适应能力和现实。本文从菲律宾移民生活的新闻报道和电影以及民族志田野调查中,探讨海外菲律宾劳工(ofw)的形成和部署如何从关注维持国家转变为支持移民家庭和发展跨地方社区。通过这种考察,本文试图揭示谁从建立在跨国劳动力迁移基础上的更大的经济体系所创造和维持的不稳定中获利和负债。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Lives Lived in “Someone Else's Hands”: Precarity and Profit-making of Migrants and Left-behind Children in the Philippines
Abstract In the labour brokerage state of systematic recruitment and export for the maximisation of labour, development, and profit, the Philippines continues to simultaneously fashion migrant workers as temporary, yet heroic and sacrificial. As the largest migrant-sending country in Southeast Asia and the third largest remittance recipient in Asia, the Philippines’ discourse of migrants as modern-day heroes and martyrs reveals the interplay of nationalist myths and cultural values, alongside the neoliberal favouring of finance and flexible labour, to craft filial migrants and celebrate mobile, capitalist subjects over migrants’ welfare and well-being. The article explores the contemporaneous institutionalisation of migrant labour and migrants’ institutionalised uncertainty lived every day to investigate how this profound precariousness in the Philippines is perpetuated historically to shape the resilience and realities of migrants and their left-behind children today. Drawing from news reports and films on migrant lives and ethnographic fieldwork in the Philippines, this article considers how the formation and deployment of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) turns from a focus on sustaining the nation to supporting migrant families and developing translocal communities. Through this examination, the paper seeks to uncover who profits and is indebted from the precarity created and sustained by the larger economic system built on transnational labour migration.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: TRaNS approaches the study of Southeast Asia by looking at the region as a place that is defined by its diverse and rapidly-changing social context, and as a place that challenges scholars to move beyond conventional ideas of borders and boundedness. TRaNS invites studies of broadly defined trans-national, trans-regional and comparative perspectives. Case studies spanning more than two countries of Southeast Asia and its neighbouring countries/regions are particularly welcomed.
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