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Articles

Towards professionalism through social networks: constructing an occupational community via Facebook usage by temporary migrant workers from the Philippines

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Pages 1230-1252 | Received 12 Nov 2016, Accepted 21 Nov 2017, Published online: 18 Dec 2017
 

ABSTRACT

Social networking sites (SNSs) have restructured the ways that workers reflect on their occupational identity and work to elevate its prestige and social status. In this study, we investigate Facebook activities of Filipino temporary migrant workers employed as caregivers in Israel and instead of cultural or leisure communal and SNS activities, this study aims to focus on migrant workers’ daily occupation, questioning: How do SNS expressions shape and co-create an occupational community of temporary migrant workers? Through an extensive methodology that incorporates over 800 Facebook posts and supported by an extensive ethnographic research, the study uncovers four facets of communication that relate to caregiver work: utility, care, emotive and legal. These facets are then related to the construction of symbolic knowledge, accountability, expressivity, responsibility (ethics) and developing know-how. Thus, SNSs are found to provide a powerful platform for marginalized occupations and communities, to foster preliminary forms of (semi)professionalism, and gain social recognition from within their community and beyond. Hence, the study elucidates unintended impacts of grassrooted online self-educating communities and demonstrates their potential for evoking change in self-image and occupational identity.

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to commemorate Ms. Betsy Benjaminson. Betsy was an exceptional woman and has worked with us for several years as a language editor on this manuscript and many others. She will be dearly missed. We offer our special thanks to the editors and anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments. In addition, deep gratitude is offered to Ori Eyal for his sharp remarks on earlier junctures of this study. We are also indebted to Aarif Badarny for his reflective aid with this paper.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes on contributors

Oren Golan is a faculty member at the Faculty of Education of the University of Haifa. His work focuses on digital religion, youth's online activities and online self-educating communities; Golan is a PI at the Israeli LINKS initiative and leads a NetLab on Communities, New Media and Education [email: [email protected]].

Deby Babis is a researcher affiliated with the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Ariel University. Babis focuses on ethnic communities, voluntary organizations and ethnographic methods. In recent years she has paid additional attention to the study of Filipino overseas workers' diaspora (also known as OFWs or OCW) and is conducting comparative ethnographic work in Israel, Hong Kong and Canada [email: [email protected]].

Notes

1 Source: ‘List of Filipino Organizations in Israel.’ Filipino Embassy. Web. 23 April 2015. http://www.philippine-embassy.org.il.

Additional information

Funding

Support from the I-CORE Program of the Planning and Budgeting Committee and The Israel Science Foundation [Grant Number 1716/12].

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