Abstract


 
 
 This research examined the life experiences of Filipinos deported from Malaysia. Anchored on the symbolic interaction theory, the study sought to investigate how the interpretation of these experiences defined and shaped their personhood. It documented the life experiences of Filipino deportees before and after deportation from Malaysia to determine the consequences of such forcible repatriation on their health, socio-economic, cultural and psychosocial dimensions of life. The study looked into coping strategies with life changes focusing on deportation as a main turning point and identified this event’s differential treatment considering the variables of age and sex group. The research utilized a exploratory design and presented extensive case studies of 24 Filipino deportees, eight of which are included in this paper synthesized from in-depth interviews of deportees and key informants. Other technique used were non-participant observation and data gathering from records of government offices assisting the repatriates including the Department of Social Welfare and Development Region 9 and the Zamboanga City Philippines Social Welfare and Development Office. The study showed varying consequences of deportation with respect to the deportees’ health, socio-economic, cultural, and psychosocial condition. While all the respondents admitted having been adversely affected by their deportation there is evidence of remarkable resiliency and optimism as gleaned from their narrations. Deportees have varied interpretations of deportation in their lives. For some respondents, the experience meant re-connection and re-union with the family in the place of origin. For others, the experience meant free travel to their homeland. A number of respondents reported deportation was an opportunity to be free from detention, an experience which they described as "hell". Most of the deportees were stigmatized with the new identity, that of a Halau. Deportation was a shameful event to the family and friends but it has to be accepted because it happened and they made it happened. The respondents interpreted experience as evidence they were “meant to be at the lower rung of the ladder of life due to many reasons. Many reported the deportation experience meant they lost loved ones and felt diminished in individual worth and dignity. The recommendations that the study can make have been elucidated in the findings of the study which can be realize through policy formulation, advocacy, education/information, social networking and social services.
 
 

Highlights

  • Residential dislocation appears to be in the order of the day especially in instances where local resources that are deemed for use only by legitimate citizens are threatened by the presence of persons www.msocialwork.com

  • The deportation of Filipinos from Malaysia is of interest for this study as the researcher has personally seen thousands of families arriving in Zamboanga City

  • To find out the consequences of deportation on the health, socio-economic, cultural and psychosocial dimensions of life of the deportees. This is an exploratory research of the life experiences of the Filipino deportees before and after deportation

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Summary

Introduction

Residential dislocation appears to be in the order of the day especially in instances where local resources that are deemed for use only by legitimate citizens are threatened by the presence of persons www.msocialwork.com. The researcher utilized Symbolic Interaction Theory as the major theoretical framework to understand the biological, socio-economic, cultural and psychosocial conditions of deportees before, during and after deportation. Bennett (1996:29) further stressed that “the values used to assess the consequences of adaptation are almost always derived from the mind-sets established before the particular adaptive events" according to this author, human adaptive behaviors characterized not merely by symbol generation (that is culture) and memory storage (learning) and the preservation of out model (perceptually maladaptive) solutions that generate conflict In his study, it focuses on the biological dimensions which includes the health of the deportees as well as the socio-economic, cultural and psychosocial dimensions of life. What are the consequences of deportation with respect to the deportees’ a. health condition b. socio-economic condition c. cultural condition d. psychosocial condition

Objectives of the Study
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