Colonial Mentality and Volunteerism

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Colonial Mentality and Volunteerism Colonial mentality and volunteerism “How perspectives originated in the colonial era still influence present-day interaction.” A case study about the colonial mentality of volunteers and local Ghanaians and its influence on volunteer projects. M.H.W. Huisman I I “The key to understanding is to see through each other’s eyes” - From the song Great Spirits from the movie Brother Bear Colophon Title Colonial mentality and volunteerism “How perspectives originated in the colonial era still influence present-day interaction.” A case study about the colonial mentality of volunteers and local Ghanaians and its influence on volunteer projects. Author M.H.W. Huisman 0608513 [email protected] Master thesis Human Geography Globalisation, migration and development Nijmegen School of Management Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen Supervisor Dr. Lothar Smith May 2012 II III Preface Colonialism has always been a subject that I have been interested in. In my bachelor thesis I looked at a volcanic eruption in the Philippines and the reactions to it through the lens of colonialism and postcolonialism. This gave me insights in the perspectives of people that were related to their time of colonization. It has always intrigued me how views and perspectives from the colonial era still live on in the present-day world. If someone had said to me at the start of my study in Human Geography: “you are going to do research in Africa and life there for 2,5 months” I would have laughed and said: “That would be cool, we will see.” Now at the end of my study in Human Geography I have visited Morocco, Ghana and I even made a jump into Burkina Faso territory. These journeys have given me many insights into the complexity that is different cultures and people. These journeys have also shown me that Human Geography was the right study for me. Human Geography for me is everything combined: geography, sociology, history, economy, politics, environment and many other aspects, with people at the heart of the web. In February of 2010 I came in contact with the organization ICLI (Inter Cultural Learning Institute) who gave me the opportunity to do actual fieldwork research in Ghana. This gave me the chance to actually observe these perspectives from the colonial era in the behaviour and actions of people, both volunteers and local Ghanaians. I own a thank you to ICLI and Jolanda Goes for giving me the opportunity to go to Tamale in Ghana to actually conduct a research based on empirical data, instead of only a literature study, on what is now called colonial mentality. I would also like to thank all the wonderful people who I met in Ghana, from ICLI and through daily life. Thank to them I felt like I lived here for 2,5 months instead of only being a visitor for that period. They showed me a new attitude of life, one of relaxing instead of stressing about the little problems from which Western people could learn a lot. But on some occasions this attitude could also be irritating when missing the three basis needs of water, electricity and gas. But as the Ghanaians would say: “That’s Africa! Don’t stress, it will come. The pipe will open tomorrow!” This of course did not happen for another two weeks. But we learned not to stress about it because stressing would not make the water (gas or electricity) come any faster. A special thanks to my parents who kept believing in me through the whole process of writing this thesis. I want to say thanks you to my friends, especially Linda, for listening to me when I needed to talk about the writing process and telling me over and over again that I could do it. I want to thank Lothar Smith for all the time he gave during the writing process of this thesis, which has not been without difficulties, and the encouraging words he offered after each meeting about the chapters I had written. Thank you for reading this thesis. Miriam Huisman May 2012 IV V Table of contents Preface IV Table of contents VI Abstract X 1 Introduction 01 1.1 Formulation of the problem 03 1.2 Scientific relevance 05 1.3 Social relevance 06 1.4 The country Ghana 07 1.5 The actors 08 1.6 Lay-out of this thesis 09 2 Theoretical framework: theories and concepts related to colonial 11 2.1 British colonialism and imperialism 11 2.2 Neocolonialism 13 2.3 Postcolonialism 16 2.3.1 Edward Said’s Orientalism 17 2.4 Post-development theory 18 2.5 A post-development nature versus a neocolonial nature 20 2.6 Concepts from conceptual model 21 2.6.1 Colonial mentality 22 2.6.2 Discourse 24 2.6.3 Western way of knowledge 26 2.6.4 Expert role 27 2.6.5 The influence of the Educational program 28 2.6.6 Dependent / independent nature of the projects 28 2.6.7 Effectiveness 29 3 Methodology of this thesis 31 3.1 Research methods 31 3.1.1 Different contexts in the research 32 3.2 Field work research methods 33 3.2.1 Cases 37 3.3 Data analysis research methods 37 3.3.1 Grounded theory 38 3.3.2 Content analysis 39 3.4 Reflections on research 39 VI 4 The influence of the colonial era on Ghana – a historical overview 41 4.1 The Ghana Empire and migration – Pre-colonization 41 4.2 The Gold Coast colony – The Era of colonization (1471 – 1957) 42 4.2.1 1471 – Trade with the Gold Coast by different European powers 43 4.2.2 British strive to take over the Gold Coast (from early 19th century) 45 4.2.3 Formal colonization of Ghana 1901 – 1957 for the Northern Territories 51 4.3 The move towards an independent Ghana 53 4.3.1 The Northern Territories and independence 53 4.4 Ghana after independence 55 5 Influences of the colonial era on Ghana - present-day overview 57 5.1 The Ghanaian economy and development 57 5.1.1 The economy of Northern Ghana 59 5.2 The educational system in Ghana 60 5.2.1 Education in Northern Ghana 62 5.3 Religion 64 5.4 Culture and social life 64 6 Preparation of both volunteers and local Ghanaians: first interaction between two different cultures 67 6.1 The Educational program of ICLI 67 6.1.1 Observations during the Educational program 69 6.2 Postcolonial / Post-development nature or neocolonial nature 76 6.3 Influence of the Educational Program on the behaviour of volunteers and Ghanaians 77 6.4 Reflections on Educational program 78 6.5 Preparation/introduction programs of other volunteers and local Ghanaians 81 7 Interactions during the work at the volunteer projects 83 7.1 The different cases visited for observations 83 7.2 Expert role 85 7.3 Western way of knowledge versus Ghanaian way of knowledge 89 7.3.1 Teaching methods in primary schools 91 7.4 Influence of the volunteers/researches presence 94 7.5 Dependent / independent nature of the project 99 7.6 Postcolonial/post-development nature or neocolonial nature 100 8 Interactions between volunteers and local Ghanaians in daily life 103 8.1 Expert role 104 8.2 Western way of knowing versus Ghanaian way of knowing 105 8.3 Perspectives on the Western world of the Ghanaians 108 8.4 Perspectives on the Ghanaian world of the volunteers 110 8.5 Relationship between volunteers and local Ghanaians 112 VII 9 Conclusions 115 9.1 Colonial mentality of the volunteers and the local Ghanaians 115 9.1.1 Volunteers 115 9.1.2 Local Ghanaians 117 9.2 Answering the central question 119 9.3 Recommendations 121 9.4 Scope for future research 122 Appendix 1 Questionnaire Educational program 125 Appendix 2 Questionnaires Teachers 127 Appendix 3 Timetable ICLI Educational program 129 Literature 133 VIII IX Abstract On the global scale it are always the Western countries in power who tell the other countries of the world how to do things the ‘right’ way, according to democratic and capitalistic principles. The behaviour of these Western countries that the West is superior to all the other countries can be traced back to the colonial era in which many Western countries were the rulers of colonies in Asia and Africa. In these colonies, rules and principles were implemented according to Western ways without the concern if these rules and principles were even applicable to these countries that often had a different culture and a different set of moral and values. The people in the colonies had no chance to protest and over the years they may have started to believe that the Western way is indeed superior to their own way. This thesis researches if this perspective of superiority of the Western ways can also be found on a smaller and more local scale. In this case in volunteer projects in Tamale, Ghana. The behaviour and interactions of volunteers and local Ghanaians are observed to see if these perspectives are still present and if the Western volunteers see themselves as superior to the local Ghanaians and if the local Ghanaians indeed believe that the Western ways are better than their own. These perspectives can be related to the colonial mentality of the volunteers and local Ghanaians. Colonial mentality is defined as “the perspectives of present day people that have their origin in a historical colonial context and are apparent in the attitude and interaction towards others.” A question that arises is if these perspectives, a person’s colonial mentality, influence the effectiveness of the volunteer projects both actors work in.
Recommended publications
  • International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives Vol
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by The University of Sydney: Sydney eScholarship Journals online The International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives Vol. 18, No 2, 2019, pp. 40-54 https://openjournals.library.sydney.edu.au/index.php/IEJ Pilipinx becoming, punk rock pedagogy, and the new materialism Noah Romero University of Auckland, New Zealand: [email protected] This paper employs the new materialist methodology of diffraction to probe the entanglements of matter and discourse that comprise the assemblage of Pilipinx becoming, or the ways by which people are racialized as Pilipinx. By methodologically diffracting Pilipinx becoming through the public pedagogy of punk rock, this research complicates standard stories of Pilipinx identity to provoke more generative encounters with the Pilipinx diaspora in Oceania. As new materialist theory holds that social life is produced by aggregations of related events, it rejects the notion that ontological becoming is dictated by immutable systemic or structural realities. This application of new materialist ontology contributes to understandings of relationality by demonstrating how Pilipinx identity emerges out of processes of relational becoming comprised of co-constitutive discourses, movements, and materialities of human and nonhuman origin. This approach troubles conceptions of Pilipinx becoming which propose that Pilipinx bodies are racialized through the imposition of colonial mentalities and broadens these theorizations by approaching Pilipinx becoming as a relational process in which coloniality plays a part. This relational conceptualization of Pilipinx becoming is informed by how punk rock, when framed as a form of education, complicates dominant understandings of the contexts, conditions, and capacities of Pilipinx bodies.
    [Show full text]
  • Race and Gender of Aesthetics and Affections: Algorithmization of Racism and Sexism in Contemporary Digital Image Banks Matrizes, Vol
    Matrizes ISSN: 1982-2073 ISSN: 1982-8160 [email protected] Universidade de São Paulo Brasil Carrera, Fernanda Race and gender of aesthetics and affections: algorithmization of racism and sexism in contemporary digital image banks Matrizes, vol. 14, no. 2, 2020, May-, pp. 217-240 Universidade de São Paulo Brasil DOI: https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.1982-8160.v14i2p217-240 Available in: https://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=143066518013 How to cite Complete issue Scientific Information System Redalyc More information about this article Network of Scientific Journals from Latin America and the Caribbean, Spain and Journal's webpage in redalyc.org Portugal Project academic non-profit, developed under the open access initiative 217 Race and gender of aesthetics and affections: algorithmization of racism and sexism in contemporary digital image databases A raça e o gênero da estética e dos afetos: algoritmização do racismo e do sexismo em bancos contemporâneos de imagens digitais FERNANDA CARRERAa Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. Escola de Comunicação. Rio de Janeiro – RJ, Brasil ABSTRACT a Professor of Escola de Comunicação of the This article questions the processes of algorithmization of racism and sexism in digital Universidade Federal do image banks. Fundamental devices for the maintenance of the media and communication Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ). Professor of the Graduate mechanics, these banks help guide the senses about being a woman and being black Program in Communication through subtle modes of subjective construction. The keywords aggressiveness, kindness, ofthe Universidade Federal Fluminense (PPGCOM/UFF) beauty and ugliness were analyzed in Getty Images and Shutterstock image banks, covering and of the Graduate Program the aesthetic and affective dimensions of the discriminatory biases impregnated in these in Media Studies (PPGEM/ UFRN).
    [Show full text]
  • Colonial Name, Colonial Mentality and Ethnocentrism
    Colonial Name, Colonial Mentality and Ethnocentrism NATHAN GILBERT QUIMPO The Philippines is named after the Spanish king, Philip II, under whose or­ ders the country was colonized in 1565. Since the Philippines gained indepen­ dence in 1946, there have been several attempts to have the country's nam~ changed, mainly on the grounds that it is of colonial extraction. Each proposal for a name change has been shot down, and Philippines has prevailed. Defenders of Phillppines have argued that it is the veritable symbol of a saga of nation-building, of the struggle for freedom, and a true emblem of the nation and of national identity. While millions have proudly identified themselves as Filipinos and hundreds of thousands have fought or even died in the name of the Philippines, Phtlippines and Filipino are both tarnished terms. There is more to their being colonial-they repre­ sent what Frantz Fanon referred to as the internalization or "epidermalization" of inferiority among peoples subjected to colonization. Moreover, at different stages of the country's history, Phz1ippines and Fz1ipino have been associated with t'acial, class, ethnic/national and religious discrimination. A significant section of Muslim "Filipi­ nos" have objected to these terms, claiming these to be of colonial origin and insulting to their creed. In this writer's view, Philippines and Ft1ipino are reflecti~e of the ethno­ centric bias of the Christian majority and of the ethnocratic tenden~es of the Philip­ pine state. Quimpo While the name Philippines is certainly not the matrix of the colonial mentality that persists among many Filipinos, changing it may provide added impetus to the process of cultural decolonization.
    [Show full text]
  • Mirza Mazhar Jan-I-Janan (D.1781) on the Hindus Sherali Tareen Macalester College
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by DigitalCommons@Macalester College Macalester Islam Journal Volume 1 Spring 2006 Article 3 Issue 2 10-11-2006 Reifying Religion While Lost in Translation: Mirza Mazhar Jan-i-Janan (d.1781) on the Hindus SherAli Tareen Macalester College Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.macalester.edu/islam Recommended Citation Tareen, SherAli (2006) "Reifying Religion While Lost in Translation: Mirza Mazhar Jan-i-Janan (d.1781) on the Hindus," Macalester Islam Journal: Vol. 1: Iss. 2, Article 3. Available at: http://digitalcommons.macalester.edu/islam/vol1/iss2/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Religious Studies Department at DigitalCommons@Macalester College. It has been accepted for inclusion in Macalester Islam Journal by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@Macalester College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Tareen: Reifying Religion While Lost in Translation: Macalester Islam Journal Fall 2006 page 18 ______________________________________________________ Reifying Religion While Lost in Translation: Mirza Mazhar Jan-i Janan (d.1781) on the Hindus SherAli Tareen ’05, Ph.D. candidate, Duke University This paper examines the life and thought of one of the leading Muslim revivalist thinkers in 18th century India, Mirza Mazhar Jan-i-Janan (1699-1781) in an effort to understand the relationship, if any, between the structures of knowledge that informed colonial conceptions of India’s religious topography and 18th century projects of intra-religious and cross-religious interpretation (such as that conducted by Jan-i Janan)? In addition, the project aims at informing the inquiry as to the extent to which the process of reification that led to the development of a unified notion of ‘Hinduism’ in the modern era already was underway in the works of 18th century figures such as Jan-i Janan? Published by DigitalCommons@Macalester College, 2006 1 Macalester Islam Journal, Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • Critical Historical Consciousness & Decolonizing for Filipinx American
    Critical Historical Consciousness & Decolonizing for Filipinx American Undergraduates Dalya Amiel Perez A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Washington 2020 Reading Committee: Joe Lott, Chair Rick Bonus Kara Jackson Joy Williamson Lott Program Authorized to Offer Degree: College of Education 1 ©Copyright 2020 Dalya Amiel Perez 2 University of Washington Abstract Critical Historical Consciousness & Decolonizing for Filipinx American Undergraduates Dalya Amiel Perez Chair of the Supervisory Committee: Professor Joe Lott College of Education This study seeks to understand how undergraduate Filipinx Americans develop historical consciousness and what the impacts of this are on their racial identity. The roots of Filipinx American historical erasure date back to colonization of the Philippines, both Spanish and U.S. occupations of the Philippines and continue to have a damaging effect on Filipinx Americans today (Leonardo & Matias, 2013). Evidence of this erasure is apparent in the absence of U.S. Philippine history from textbooks as well as the general absence of anything related to Filipinx Americans in contemporary pop culture or dominant narratives. Another form of erasure is in the invisiblity of Filipinx Americans under the racial category of Asian. This monolithic racial category obstructs possibilities to examine unique experiences, successes, and challenges Filipinx Americans as well as many other Asian groups face (Teranishi, 2010). In sum, the legacy of historical erasure, starting with colonization in the Philippines and the invizibilizing of Filipinos as Asian are factors that explain contemporary struggles for Filipinx Americans in higher educational contexts. My research seeks to examine the relationship between these phenomena and to explore what happens when Filipinx American undergraduates engage in learning critical colonial history.
    [Show full text]
  • Colonial N Arne, Colonial Mentality and Ethnocentrism Revisiting the Maritime Territories and Jurisdictions of the Philippines S
    JANUA R Y - JUNE 2000 VOL IV NO 1 Colonial N arne, Colonial Mentality and Ethnocentrism NATHAN GILBERT QUIMPO Revisiting the Maritime Territories and Jurisdictions of the Philippines .JAY L BATONGBACAL Some Marine Transport Concerns GLENN D AGUILAR BOOK REVIEW Edgar Wickberg: The Chinese in Philippine Life 1850- 189 8 MICHAEL L TAN P 350 in the Philippines 10 elsewhere RlJBLIC YOLICY EDITORIAL BOARD Francisco Nemenzo Jr, Chairman; Emil Q Javier; Jose Abueva; Edgardo J Angara; Emmanuel V Soriano, Onofre D Corpuz; Raul V Fabella; Maria Carmen C Jimenez; Jose N Endriga Managing Editor: MARIA CARMEN C JIMENEZ Research Assistant: RAPHAEL 0 CADA Design: ARIEL G MANUEL Public Policy (ISSN 0118-8526) is published semi-annually by the University of the Philippines. Subscription Rates (inclusive of postage): P1400(local), US$50 (Foreign Individual), US$60 ,(Foreign Institution). Editorial, Business & Subscription Of/ices UP Center for Integrative and Development Studies UP Bahay ng Alumni Building 1101 Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines Telephone 434-9282 Telefax 929-3540 Email [email protected] Public Policy accepts submissions of manuscripts accordance with the comments and suggestions examining contemporary social, cultural, economic of referees. The editors will not assume any and political issues in the Philippines and the Asia­ responsibility for manuscripts received; materials ~ Pacific. Manuscripts must be submitted on diskette will be returned only if a written request of such is and as hard copy, must include an abstract and made by the author/s . proper references with end notes kept to a The articles in Public Policy do not represent minimum. A style that is comprehensible and easy the views of the University of the Philippines.
    [Show full text]
  • Challenging Filipino Colonial Mentality with Philippine Art Francesca V
    The University of San Francisco USF Scholarship: a digital repository @ Gleeson Library | Geschke Center Master's Theses Theses, Dissertations, Capstones and Projects Fall 12-16-2016 Challenging Filipino Colonial Mentality with Philippine Art Francesca V. Mateo University of San Francisco, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.usfca.edu/thes Part of the Art Education Commons, Asian American Studies Commons, Asian History Commons, Bilingual, Multilingual, and Multicultural Education Commons, Cultural History Commons, Ethnic Studies Commons, International and Intercultural Communication Commons, Social and Cultural Anthropology Commons, and the Social Psychology Commons Recommended Citation Mateo, Francesca V., "Challenging Filipino Colonial Mentality with Philippine Art" (2016). Master's Theses. 196. https://repository.usfca.edu/thes/196 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, Capstones and Projects at USF Scholarship: a digital repository @ Gleeson Library | Geschke Center. It has been accepted for inclusion in Master's Theses by an authorized administrator of USF Scholarship: a digital repository @ Gleeson Library | Geschke Center. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Challenging Filipino Colonial Mentality with Philippine Art Francesca V. Mateo University of San Francisco – Master of Arts in International Studies – December 2016 ABSTRACT 350 years, the Philippines was colonized by Spain and the United States. The Philippines became a sovereign nation in 1946 yet, fifty years later, colonial teachings continue to oppress Filipinos due to their colonial mentality (CM.) CM is an internalized oppression among Filipinos in which they experience an automatic preference for anything Western—European or U.S. American— and rejection of anything Filipino.
    [Show full text]
  • The Rebirth of Cultural Colonialism As Religionswissenschaft: Rudolf Otto’S Import House
    The Rebirth of Cultural Colonialism as Religionswissenschaft: Rudolf Otto’s Import House GREGORY D. ALLES McDaniel College Abstract During his ‘world journey’ of 1911–1912, Rudolf Otto came to embrace a form of German cultural colonialism which assigned the study of religions a key role. Concern for this colonial program guided his activities until the outbreak of World War I, when German colonial ambitions became unrealistic. Although it is difficult to argue that this colonial project had a major impact on Otto’s conception of religion, it did alter his scholarly practice with regard to it, transforming him from a liberal systematic theologian into something more akin to what we know today as a scholar of religions. For 25 years, fom 1912 until his death in 1937, much of Otto’s professional activity was taken up with importing religious materials from elsewhere, especially from south Asia—mostly texts but also material artefacts. This article reads Otto’s colonialism and its rebirth as Religionswissenschaft against the grain of Otto’s self-conception and the conception of others at the time. While cultural colonialism insisted upon its distance from the activities of the business classes, this article reads those activities in mercantile terms. In doing so, it suggests that such a re-reading might be profitably applied not just to conceptions of scholarly activity but also to other areas where it has been customary to insist on distance from economic activity, specifically, the way in which scholars of religions have conceived what we usually call religion. Keywords: Rudolf Otto, colonialism, study of religion In 1911–1912 Rudolf Otto made a ‘journey around the world’.
    [Show full text]
  • Women and the Colonial State
    EIsbeth Locher-Scholten Women and t e Colonial State WOMEN AND THE COLONIAL STATE Women and the Colonial State Essays on Gender andModernity in the Netherlands Indies Elsbeth Locher-Scholten AMSTERDAM UNIVERSITY PRESS This publication was made possible by a grant from the Netherlands Organization of Scientific Research (NWO) Cover illustration:]antje and Agnes in the care ofBaboe Mina. Surabaya 1915 (KIT Amsterdam) Cover design: NAP, Amsterdam Lay-out: Magenta, Amsterdam NUGI 646/665 ISBN 90 5356 403 9 © Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam, 2000 All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or other­ wise), without the written permission of both the copyright owner and the author of this book. Contents Preface 9 ByWay ofa Prologue and Epilogue: '3 Gender, Modernity and the Colonial State Mter the 'The Family ofMan' '3 Women and the Colonial State '4 Historical Context ,6 Contents 23 Orientalism, Gender and Class 25 Whiteness and 'European-ness' 30 Colonial Modernity and Gender 32 Nation-State and Female Colonial Citizenship 37 II Female Labour in Twentieth Century ColonialJava: 49 European Notions - Indonesian Practices Introduction 49 European Notions 50 Female Night Labour in the Netherlands Indies 52 The Indonesian Practice: Figures from the '920S and '930S 55 Analyses ofIndigenous Agriculture 55 The Census of '930
    [Show full text]
  • Mental Health Equity of Filipino Communities in COVID-19
    Mental Health Equity of Filipino Communities in COVID-19: A Framework for Practice The Professional Counselor™ Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages 73–85 http://tpcjournal.nbcc.org and Advocacy © 2021 NBCC, Inc. and Affiliates doi: 10.15241/cdc.11.1.73 Christian D. Chan, Stacey Diane Arañez Litam The emergence and global spread of COVID-19 precipitated a massive public health crisis combined with multiple incidents of racial discrimination and violence toward Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) communities. Although East Asian communities are more frequently targeted for instances of pandemic- related racial discrimination, multiple disparities converge upon Filipino communities that affect their access to mental health care in light of COVID-19. This article empowers professional counselors to support the Filipino community by addressing three main areas: (a) describing how COVID-19 contributes to racial microaggressions and institutional racism toward Filipino communities; (b) underscoring how COVID-19 exacerbates exposure to stressors and disparities that influence help-seeking behaviors and utilization of counseling among Filipinos; and (c) outlining how professional counselors can promote racial socialization, outreach, and mental health equity with Filipino communities to mitigate the effects of COVID-19. Keywords: Asian American, Filipino, mental health equity, COVID-19, discrimination Asian Americans represent the fastest-growing ethnic group in the United States (Budiman et al., 2019). Following the global outbreak of COVID-19, many Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs) have experienced a substantial increase in race-based hate incidents. These incidents of racial discrimination have included verbal harassment, physical attacks, and discrimination against Asian- owned businesses (Jeung & Nham, 2020), which multiply the harmful effects on psychological well- being and life satisfaction among AAPIs (Litam & Oh, 2020).
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction: Collective Memories of Colonial Violence Vol. 4 (1) 2010
    urn:nbn:de:0070-ijcv-2010175 IJCV: Vol. 4 (1) 2010, pp. 4 – 10 Introduction: Collective Memories of Colonial Violence Chiara Volpato, Department of Psychology, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, Italy Laurent Licata, Social Psychology Unit, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium Vol. 4 (1) 2010 Focus: Editorial (p. 3) Collective Memories Introduction: Collective Memories of Colonial Violence of Colonial Violence Chiara Volpato / Laurent Licata (pp. 4 – 10) Guest Editors: Learning About Our Shameful Past: A Socio-Psychological Analysis of Present-Day Chiara Volpato and Historical Narratives of Italian Colonial Wars Giovanna Leone / Tiziana Mastrovito (pp. 11 – 27) Laurent Licata Collective Memories of Portuguese Colonial Action in Africa: Representations of the Colonial Past among Mozambicans and Portuguese Youths Rosa Cabecinhas / João Feijó (pp. 28 – 44) Holocaust or Benevolent Paternalism? Intergenerational Comparisons on Collective Memories and Emotions about Belgium’s Colonial Past Laurent Licata / Olivier Klein (pp. 45 – 57) The Shadow of the Italian Colonial Experience: The Impact of Collective Emotions on Intentions to Help the Victims’ Descendants Silvia Mari / Luca Andrighetto / Alessandro Gabbiadini / Federica Durante / Chiara Volpato (pp. 58 – 74) Atoning for Colonial Injustices: Group-Based Shame and Guilt Motivate Support for Reparation Jesse A. Allpress / Fiona Kate Barlow / Rupert Brown / Winnifred R. Louis (pp. 75 – 88) Dealing with Past Colonial Conflicts: How Perceived Characteristics of the Victimized Outgroup Can Influence the Experience of Group-Based Guilt Ana Mateus Figueiredo / Bertjan Doosje / Joaquim Pires Valentim / Sven Zebel (pp. 89 – 105) The Dark Duo of Post-Colonial Ideology: A Model of Symbolic Exclusion and Historical Negation Chris G. Sibley (pp. 106 – 123) Indigenous Suicide and Colonization: The Legacy of Violence and the Necessity of Self-Determination Keri Lawson-Te Aho / James H.
    [Show full text]
  • Deconstructing the Colonial Mentality and Ethnic Identity of Filipinos: an Exploratory
    Deconstructing the Colonial Mentality and Ethnic Identity of Filipinos: An Exploratory Study of Second Generation Filipinos By Desmond R. Morente M.S., San Diego State University, 2002 B.A., San Diego State University, 2000 A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Claremont Graduate University and San Diego State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate Faculty of Education May 2015 Dissertation Committee San Diego State University Claremont Graduate University Dr. Karen Cadiero Kaplan, Co-Chair Dr. William Perez, Co-Chair Dr. Alberto Ochoa, Member Dr. Gilda Ochoa, Member Approval of the Review Committee This dissertation has been duly read, reviewed, and critiqued by the Committee listed below, which hereby approves the manuscript of Desmond R. Morente as fulfilling the scope and quality requirements of meriting the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Education Dr. Karen Cadiero-Kaplan, Co-Chair Dr. William Perez, Co-Chair San Diego State University Claremont Graduate University Ph.D Ph.D Dr. Alberto Ochoa, Member Dr. Gilda Ochoa, Member San Diego State University Pomona College Ph.D Ph.D Abstract Deconstructing the Colonial Mentality and Ethnic Identity of Filipinos: An Exploratory Study of Second Generation Filipinos By Desmond R. Morente Claremont Graduate University & San Diego State University 2015 Studying the ethnic identity perceptions and experiences of Filipinos is important because Filipinos are homogenized as Asians in contemporary U.S. society. This misidentification of Filipinos as Asians is misleading. Asians have been stereotyped as the model minority. The term “model minority” romanticizes Asian Americans as hardworking, successful, and law abiding citizens that overcome hardship, oppression, and racism to achieve success (Alvarez, Juang, & Liang, 2006; Lee & Joo, 2005).
    [Show full text]