Resilience and Familism

The Dynamic Nature of Families in the Philippines

Veronica L. Gregorio|Clarence M. Batan|Sampson Lee Blair
Emerald
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Hardback
9781804554159
10 August 2023
£100.00
eBook (PDF)
9781804554142
10 August 2023
£100.00
eBook (ePub)
9781804554166
10 August 2023
£100.00

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  • Description
  • Contents
  • About

Recognising the distinctive context of the Philippines, with its unique long history, and peculiar population distribution across thousands of islands, this edited collection analyses its decidedly familial culture. Why do Filipino families maintain perhaps the strongest family bonds of any culture? How have shown a unique ability to persevere, even when faced with the direst of circumstances?

Covering a broad range of topics, chapters and commentaries delve into changing gender roles, poverty and family dynamics, mothering in prison, teenage fatherhood, dating and mate selection, rural family norms, the interweave of family and community, media representations on families, new forms of parenthood, remittances and familial support systems, and how overseas employment affects spousal and parent-child relationships.

A highly comprehensive ethnographic analysis, Resilience and Familism demonstrates in a specifically Filipino context how strong familial ties can affect inner strength and outer determination.

Foreword; Veronica L. Gregorio, Clarence M. Batan, and Sampson Lee Blair

  • Chapter 1. A Demographic Portrait of the Filipino Family: A Glimpse from the Recent Past; Jeofrey B.Abalos
  • Narratives of parenthood
  • Chapter 2. The Road to Visibility: IVF and Motherhood Journey of Filipino Influencers; Samuel I. Cabbuag
  • Chapter 3. Pregnancy, Motherhood and Family: Stories Behind the Bars; Romulo Nieva, Jr.
  • Chapter 4. Acceptance is key: Towards a framework for understanding serial cohabitation; Veronica L. Gregorio
  • Chapter 5. Selected Cases of Teenage Fatherhood in the Philippines: An Analysis of Risks and Resilience; Joselito G. Gutierrez, Tisha Isabelle M. De Vergara, and Clarence M. Batan
  • Care provisions in/from the family
  • Chapter 6. ICT-Mediated Familial Care in Turbulent Times: Filipinos’ Subjectivities, Virtual Intimacy, and Resilience amid Social Change; Derrace Garfield McCallum
  • Chapter 7. An Exposition of the Multidimensionality of Tagasalo Personality; Rizason L. Go Tian-Ng and Jofel D. Umandap
  • Chapter 8. Maintaining Personhood and Identity in Dementia: Families as Partners in Care; Tricia Olea Santos, Hanna K. Ulatowska, and Carla Krishan A. Cuadro
  • Chapter 9. Sexual Identity Visibility and Compounding Stigma in the Familial Context: Life Histories among Filipino MSMs Living with HIV; Jerome V. Cleofas and Dennis Erasga
  • Chapter 10. Family Relationship, Mental Well-Being, and Life Satisfaction during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Mediation Study among Filipino Graduate Students; Jerome V. Cleofas and Ryan Michael F. Oducado
  • Families of OFWs, farmers, and fisherfolks
  • Chapter 11. Response and Coping Mechanism of OFW Children to Parents' Separation; Sunshine Therese S. Alcantara
  • Chapter 12. The Family as a Farm Institution: Cases in Japan and the Philippines; Carlo S. Gutierrez
  • Chapter 13. Parental Livelihood Preference for Children among Municipal Fishing Families in South Negros, Philippines; Enrique G. Oracion
  • Representations of the Filipino family
  • Chapter 14. Self, Family, and Democracy: Individualism and Collectivism in the Contemporary Filipino Family Film; Janus Isaac V. Nolasco
  • Chapter 15. Tunay Na Lalaki/True Manhood in the Philippines: Historical Development, Identity Formations and Family Contexts; A. M. Leal Rodriguez
  • Chapter 16. The Elderly in the Filipino Family; Belen T. Medina and Maria Cecilia T. Medina

Veronica L. Gregorio teaches in the Department of Sociology, National University of Singapore. She is interested in agrarian changes, family dynamics, and gender and sexuality, with a regional focus on Southeast Asia.

Clarence M. Batan is Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Santo Tomas, Philippines. His research interests include the sociology of childhood and youth, the sociology of work and employment, the sociology of Filipino Catholicism, and qualitative and mixed methods.

Sampson Lee Blair is a family sociologist and demographer at The State University of New York, Buffalo, USA. His research focuses on parent-child relationships, mate selection, marriage, and fertility. He is currently a visiting professor at the University of Santo Tomas, Philippines.