Love knows no boundaries
Reports of abuse suffered by Southeast Asian wives
of men in East Asian countries regularly capture media attention.
Cross-border marriages
have been steadily growing in number since the 1980s in Japan, and from the
1990s in Taiwan, South Korea and Singapore. In the case of Taiwan, marriages to
a foreign-born wife accounted for 13 per cent of all new marriages in 2009,
down from a high of 28 per cent in 2003. Does cross-border marriage represent
citizens exercising a fundamental right recognised in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights? Or, since many of these marriages
involve forms of brokering, are they as many critics contend a form of human
trafficking?
Marriages between women from less wealthy regions to men of affluent
nations emerged as an aspect of the significant growth in global migration
since the 1970s, with possibilities for mass travel on wide-bodied jets and the
associated phenomenon of global mass tourism.
The first ‘wave’ to catch public attention was Filipinas seeking spouses
in countries like the United States, Canada and Australia. Relatively high
levels of education and ability to speak English enabled these women to engage
in correspondence courtship, brokered through third parties such as agents
(often also travel agents) or magazines — in the case of Australia, Australian
Post and Australian Singles.
This is the origin of the pejorative term ‘mail order bride’, which
denied the agency of the women and disregarded the ways in which the couples
negotiated relationships through mail, phone calls and face-to-face meetings.
When I interviewed transnational couples who had experienced correspondence
courtship (including via the internet) their narratives commonly fixed on the
moment when ‘the spark’ between them was ignited: ‘And the rest is history’ was
a common phrase used.
The Australian experience gives us an important clue to how this
phenomenon has further developed in East Asia. Many of the Filipinas who
married Australians were urban educated women who married men in mining towns
in places such as Western Queensland or the Hunter Valley. Earlier waves of
Australian migration that attracted male industrial workers resulted in
localised demographic imbalances. Correspondence courtship to seek a Filipina
spouse was one of the few avenues open to these male migrants to marry and have
a family life.
Another early global trend involved women from Thailand and the
Philippines marrying Japanese men. Some of these were ‘entertainment marriages’
with women migrants in the entertainment industry, but many brokered marriages
echoed the Australian pattern, with farmers seeking a solution to their
difficulties finding Japanese spouses.
Demographic imbalances have contributed to the rise of cross-border
marriages (in the case of South Korea and Taiwan, as a consequence of sex
selective abortions), as has increasing education levels creating new
aspirations for women in East Asia whereby life as a farmers’ wife does not
appeal. In urbanised Singapore, women want to ‘marry up’ (encouraged by
state-sponsored population control policies) so low-status men in low-paid jobs
face difficulties marrying. They — or their parents — broker marriages with
women from Vietnam and Thailand.
Is this a form of trafficking? Brokering cross-border marriages has
become a business opportunity for companies that are often also employment or
travel agents. Men can pay up to US$10,000 to brokers, who might net
US$1000–$5000 per ‘transaction’. But a significant proportion are still
arranged by relatives. Often, the arranging of these transnational marriages is
akin to customary forms of marriage brokerage.
South Korea has very high rates of cross-border marriage. Vietnamese,
(including ethnic Chinese) mainly from the poorer south, are becoming the most
common marriage migrants to East Asia. China, Cambodia and Mongolia are also
becoming sources of brides.
Cases of abuse, such as Southeast Asian women unwittingly being
recruited to prostitution by Western or East Asian spouses through promises of
marriage, or cases of family violence, attract sensational reporting. While
these illegal actions require official responses and management they should not
be used to argue for bans on cross-border marriage.
Australia and the Philippines, for example, have long implemented
policies aimed at minimising the risk of exploitation of prospective brides —
and grooms. These included improved processes for testing the authenticity of
relationships but also working with community and church organisations to
provide information to prospective marriage migrants about life in Australia
and their legal rights and support services. South Korea, for example, has
followed a similar path with screening and counselling of foreign brides and
spouses. There are also many NGOs providing support to migrant brides.
The governments of countries from which cross-border spouses come have
struggled to regulate the phenomenon, oscillating between attempts to ban and
regulate brokers. But banning is difficult. Brokering is an outgrowth of
customary forms of arranging marriage, and it relies very heavily on
personalised networks. It is still the case that the majority of cross-border
marriages are organised through family and kinship networks, and increasingly
facilitated by modern technology. These marriages can be particularly important
in allowing women from less-developed countries to work in high-wage economies
and send home remittances.
Cross-border marriage is inevitable in our globalised world, an aspect of its
cosmopolitanism. It inevitably involves risk, but for many it offers
opportunities in regard to their personal life, social experience as well as
economic opportunity.
Kathryn Robinson is a
professor of anthropology at The Australian National University.
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