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14 - Opportunities and Challenges in Integrating Indigenous Peoples and Cultural Diversity in International Studies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 October 2022

Abby Day
Affiliation:
Goldsmiths, University of London
Lois Lee
Affiliation:
University of Kent, Canterbury
Dave S. P. Thomas
Affiliation:
University of Kent, Canterbury
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Summary

Introduction

A major legacy of Spanish and American colonialism in the Philippines education system is the dominance of Western perspectives in teaching and research practices. Almost 100 years after the American departure, English is still used as the official language across all areas in Philippine society, local schools commonly adopt Western models in instruction and research, and Filipinos themselves generally prefer college degrees that offer international career prospects, most notably in nursing and international studies. In university settings, the most apparent impact of the dominance of the “global North” is the marginalization of academic fields and disciplines that focus on and emphasize the country’s ethnic diversity. It can be argued that this neglect in understanding the inherently diverse character of the Philippines has pushed its indigenous peoples (IPs) to the country’s impoverished peripheries.

Owing to its archipelagic geography, the Philippines is inherently culturally diverse, with more than 170 ethnolinguistic groups spread over more than 7,000 islands (Alvina et al, 2020, p 5). Remarkably, the country has retained this cultural diversity despite suffering multiple waves of colonial subjugation spanning more than three centuries. However, rather than being a source of national pride, the IPs in the Philippines are the most marginalized groups in the country. The continued exclusion and discrimination against ethnic minorities and the long history of their struggle for basic rights are among the most apparent markers of the colonial legacies in the Philippines.

“Minoritization” (Rodil, 1994) of IPs in the Philippines began with the Spanish colonial policy of distinguishing inhabitants in the islands between those who converted to Christianity and those who resisted conversion (Hardacker, 2012). The latter were referred to as infieles or pagans. These distinctions provided a convenient rationale for the “civilizing mission” of the later American colonial regime that took over the islands at the beginning of the 20th century. The Americans established the Bureau of Non-Christian Tribes, which purportedly sought to document the non-Christian inhabitants in the colony. In doing so, it perpetuated the racialized language of tribes that survives in Filipinos’ contemporary notions of civilizational hierarchy (Hau and Tinio, 2003). Unsurprisingly, it placed Christian Filipinos on top. Back then, Muslims and other non-Christians in the southern island Mindanao were even described as “uncivilized races” (Abinales and Amoroso, 2005, p 124).

Type
Chapter
Information
Diversity, Inclusion, and Decolonization
Practical Tools for Improving Teaching, Research, and Scholarship
, pp. 220 - 235
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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