HONG
KONG, Nov. 13, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Most
Chinese-language media reports concerning migrant domestic workers
(MDW) in Hong Kong fail to report
their mistreatment factually, independently and critically, and
focus on news appeal while neglecting the deeper roots of this
important issue, related to power and the interplay of gender,
race, ethnicity, and class, according to a recent study by
Lingnan University in Hong Kong. These news stories distance the
community from the sufferings of MDW, reinforcing inequalities, and
inhibiting any discussion that might lead to improved policies,
practices and awareness.
From 1974, the Hong Kong
government allowed residents to employ foreign domestic workers,
leading to an influx of MDW from the
Philippines. With the expansion of the middle class in
Hong Kong and increased demand for
full-time, live-in domestic helpers, the number of MDW grew from
21,500 in 1982 to more than 385,000 in 2020, around 5% of the total
population. However, despite their increasing numbers over the past
five decades and their notable contribution to local families, many
MDW in Hong Kong are still subject
to prejudice and mistreatment, just like "muijai" or amahs decades
ago. A poll conducted by the NGO Mission for Migrant Workers in
2017 revealed that a significant number of MDW respondents have
reported either physical (18% of respondents) or sexual abuse
(6%).
In order to better understand Chinese-language media
representations of MDW in Hong
Kong, and their wider significance and effects on societal
perceptions of MDW issues, Prof Janet Ho
Nga-man, Head of Department of English and Prof
Andrew Sewell, Associate Professor
of Department of English of Lingnan
University in Hong
Kong, embarked on a project analysing MDW mistreatment
reports in the Chinese-language media. They read 398 reports published between 2010 and
2019 in three popular Chinese-language newspapers, and examined the
discursive representations of perpetrators and victims in the
reports. The study placed media discourse within a broader
sociological framework in order to highlight its important role,
and to stress the inherent intersectionality of MDW issues. The
study was supported by the Early Career Scheme of Research
Grant Council.
To understand the relationship between issues such as
discrimination, power differentials, and mistreatment in their
social context, Professor Ho and Professor Sewell employed
conceptual tools of social control and structural inequality.
Social control refers to the processes, approaches, and resources
for imposing order on individuals, so that their behaviour conforms
to moral norms and expectations. Structural inequality may occur in
the form of exploitation, penetration, fragmentation, and
marginalisation.
The study identified three significant points in the way the MDW
and their employers were discursively portrayed in the news
reports. First, the reports tended to exonerate perpetrators and
blame victims. This inevitably contributed to the power imbalances
and further marginalisation of MDW. For example, in the physical
abuse cases, positive personality traits (a responsible wife) or
contributory factors (employers' emotional stress and mental
illness) were often highlighted, showing perpetrator exoneration.
The reports also tended to focus on either negative personality
traits (laziness or incompetence) or contributory factors
(unsatisfactory performance), revealing widespread victim blaming.
When perpetrator exoneration and victim blaming worked in tandem,
the severity of the mistreatment would be downplayed, and MDW put
in a disadvantaged position.
Second, through narrativisation, the media gave the stories a
familiar cognitive frame of interpretation, encouraging readers to
attribute causes of mistreatment to perceived shortcomings of the
MDWs. For example, the mother was stressed because her
children were at school, and the helper was lazy, so the mother
physically assaulted the helper. This to a certain extent
encouraged moral evaluation and legitimated the mistreatment of the
MDWs.
The third main point of these media reports was sensationalism -
presenting information so as to gain readers' attention and provoke
an emotional response. For example, in a sexual abuse case most
media reports included detailed descriptions, so that they read
like erotic or sensationalist stories. These oversimplified, overly
sexualised narratives inevitably served to misrepresent the issues
and people involved, increasing the scope for perpetrator
exoneration and victim blaming, as well as perpetuating harmful
stereotypes and structural inequalities.
The study noted that the way MDW mistreatment was framed in
Hong Kong's Chinese-language news
reports, and the discursive representation of both perpetrators and
victims contributed to community-wide stereotypes about MDW, while
maintaining existing relations of employer dominance, as well as
social control and structural inequality, which in turn set the
stage for continued domestic abuse. In fact, social exclusion and
stigmatisation of Filipinos and Indonesians are still common in
Hong Kong.
The report also highlighted the need
for researchers to engage with journalists and the general public
to challenge negative representations and fight discrimination.
While the media has to care about its readership, it should bear
some responsibility for better societal understanding of MDW
mistreatment and facilitate improved policies, practices and
awareness.
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content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/lingnan-university-study-reveals-unfair-representation-of-mdw-in-mistreatment-cases-in-chinese-language-media-301985920.html
SOURCE Lingnan University in
Hong Kong