Social Technologies

Social Media and Information Technologies for Human Interaction and Communication by @bacigalupe

Adding, Not the Same as Including: Making Family Research Relevant for All

Adding, Not the Same as Including: Making Family Research Relevant for All by Gonzalo Bacigalupe (2012) in The Family Psychologist, 28(1), 12-14

As a researcher that holds a strong allegiance to a non-dominant group, I have had the opportunity to become a member of the privileged. However, I am often reminded that I am truly not a part of the ruling class. Despite being a highly educated tenured faculty member, I can still be a subaltern—the other. Every now and then, a university adjunct professor will automatically assume that I am one of the cleaning staff and will address me as such if I speak Spanish with the Dominican janitor who picks up the trash every evening at my office. In the struggle with marginalization, as one of the few professors in my college who can claim a similar heritage to the janitor (although he cannot claim some of my privileges), I am often compelled to name reality, to deconstruct it, and to be attentive to what is silencing the vulnerable. Being a subaltern, therefore, makes me particularly aware of institutionalized “isms” and being able to see what is generally invisible to the privileged is nothing less than a privilege too. It teaches me to pay attention to how stereotypes define people and how institutionalized racism continues to play a role in educational and healthcare institutions.

CONTINUE READING (PDF).

Filed under: Community, Family, Psychology, Research, Transnational

Los 80: Fiction, Reality, Memory and Trauma in Chile.

Los 80: Fiction, Reality, Memory and Trauma in Chile.

Gonzalo Bacigalupe published in Spanish at Movimiento Generacion 80 Blog

Memory is fragile and the space of a single life is brief, passing so quickly that we never get a chance to see the relationship between events; we cannot gauge the consequences of our acts, and we believe in the fiction of past, present, and future, but it may also be true that everything happens simultaneously. … That’s why my Grandmother Clara wrote in her notebooks, in order to see things in their true dimension and to defy her own poor memory. (Isabel Allende in the House of the Spirits)

The fourth season of the Chilean television series Los 80 (dirigida por Boris Quercia) ended this week with record ratings in viewership. The reaction to the series by television viewers took over social media outlets like Twitter and Facebook. Despite the dissatisfaction of many with the fictional plot based on historical facts, the memories that the series evoked and its success debunked the notion that Chileans wish to be amnesic about their past. For some of us, the Chilean diaspora abroad, watching the series through an Internet videostream, watching the series is even a more intense experience that is not softened with the interruption of shampoo and car commercial spots.

For my generation, the one that lived its adolescence during the worst repressive years of the military dictatorship and then played an active role in the opposition to Pinochet during the 1980s, the series brings back the emotional tone and the remembering of the crazy repressive circumstances in which we grew up from adolescence to adulthood.

Some of the facts may be distorted to make the series more palatable to the large majority of Chileans. However, the plot as a whole, not only reminds us of a military and police repressive regime via its thread of detention, torture, and death, but also the authoritarian tone that permeated every institution—family, school, and work. Reflecting about this was in itself a dangerous task even in families. Questioning your teacher could be costly academically or personally. And obviously, to stand pacifically protesting the detention and torture of a classmate or friend was considered a delinquent act.

Los 80 move us to struggle with the difficult task of identifying the torturer with an actual human being, a person who may in its daily life have similar feelings to the rest of us. The plural identity of those who held the authority during that time is hard to accept though. This is particularly difficult since those responsible and those that defended the government-institutionalized violence have not made amends, have not offered to restore some of what was lost to the family of those that were victimized, nor have fully acknowledged the pain that they inflicted on their compatriots.

The fictional plot intermingled with radio and television footage offers us the opportunity to learn about, quoting Allende again, “the deepest truths with the lies of fiction”.  Andres Wood, the producer of Los 80—the director of the most acclaimed Chilean film dealing with the aftermath of the dictatorship from the perspective of a child—Machuca—leads us into reclaiming a piece of history that is made even more painful today in lieu of the continuous and ferocious rejection of the traumatic truth by those who still defend the military dictatorship human rights violation legacy.

To still be a witness to the denial of historical facts and the traumatic consequences, in commentaries by television viewers is, however, excruciating. The denial is vast. There is little acknowledgement by many of my fellow compatriots of the suffering by the families of the disappeared, the existence of an immense group of exiles who are not accepted as part of today’s Chile, and the lives of so many that were forever changed because of a savage dictatorship. For those of us who survived, suffered through, and/or were witness of the tragedy around us, the denial and lack of accountability is tremendously painful. The denial of facts and its consequences is a reminder that reconstructing memory in itself does not necessarily still change the soul of a large segment of the Chilean population.

The series is not at fault. Its success is based on the ability to engage the various truths that have been constructed based on historical facts. The death of a journalist as form of vengeance on the part of the Chilean secret service is undeniable. However, for some the facts are still considered a fiction, are minimized, or justified in the name of patriotic unity, economic development, or any other utilitarian goal that sustains the atrocious human rights legacy of the military dictatorship.

Version en Espanol: Movimiento Generacion 80 Blog

Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Community, Family, Psychology, Research, technology, Transnational, , , , , ,

Virtualizing Intimacy: Information Communication Technologies and Transnational Families in Therapy

Virtualizing Intimacy: Information Communication Technologies and Transnational Families in Therapy
By Gonzalo Bacigalupe and Susan Lambe
Back to features »

Download as PDF


All abstracts are available in Spanish and Mandarin Chinese on Wiley Online Library (http:// wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/famp). Please pass this information on to your international colleagues and students.

Information communication technologies (ICTs) are a ubiquitous feature of immigrant family life. Affordable, widely accessible, and highly adaptable ICTs have transformed the immigrant experience into a transnational process with family networks redesigned but not lost. Being a transnational family is not a new phenomenon. Transnationalism, however, has historically been reserved for the wealthier professional and political immigrant class who were able to freely travel and use expensive forms of communication before the emergence of accessible technologies. This paper systematically reviews the research literature to investigate the potential impact of ICTs on the lives of transnational families and how these families utilize them. The wide penetration of ICTs also puts into question some of the ways in which scholars have conceptualized the immigrant experience. The appropriate use of technology in family therapy should strengthen culturally competent and equity-based approaches to ad- dress the needs of these families. A family therapy with a transnational family illuminates some of the potential that these technologies introduce in the practice of relational clinicians.

Keywords: Immigration; Families; Transnational; Information Communication Technologies Fam Proc 50:12-26, 2011

An increasing number of recent immigrants maintain intense connections with their countries and extended families. (Falicov, 2007, p. 157)

In her seminal Family Process article, Celia Falicov draws on migration studies to formulate an ecosystemic and culturally affirmative therapeutic framework for use with immigrant families. Falicov briefly addresses the impact of information com- munication technologies (ICTs) in shaping immigrant family communications not- withstanding geographical and time barriers. However, this is not at the core of her thesis and requires further consideration. Owing to the advances and wide availability of ICTs in the last decade, these technologies have not only influenced families’ relations but have changed families’ identities as well. For instance, families make core life cycle as well as mundane decisions with members located in different countries.

In the recent past, only a minority of immigrant families were able to maintain continuous exchanges and communication with their relatives abroad. Unlike political refugees or economic immigrants, upper-level executives, diplomats, and other weal thy families could afford the cost of frequent travel as well as expensive phone calls. The mainstreaming of ICTs, which are tools available to most immigrants, has increasingly transformed these families into transnational entities that maintain un- interrupted social ties across national borders. Like Falicov and others in family therapy (Hardy & Laszloffy, 2002; McGoldrick & Hardy, 2008), we concur with the principle that including community and sociopolitical contexts is essential to a sound ecosystemic assessment and intervention. Thus, an equity-based and ecosystemic framework informs our analysis of the impact of technologies on immigrant families. We propose that ICTs involve deep changes in immigrants’ lives. Consequently, family psychology and family therapy concepts that have been used to characterize the psychological and relational make up of the immigrant experience may require revision in these new circumstances.

Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Family, Psychology, Research, technology, Transnational

I am working on the impact that the ICTs have on family relations

Ikerbasque researcher: Gonzalo Bacigalupe

Gonzalo2

What’s your research agenda?

There are several projects I am working on as a result of becoming an Ikerbasque Research Professor. I am very passionate about one project I have been able to write, prepare proposals, and carry on fieldwork. The general inquiry questions asks what is the impact that the adoption of information communication technologies (ICTs)  have on family relations. We know a lot about computer-mediated-communication from an individual perspective but very little on how family process is modified and how in turn the same family processes impact ICTs usage.  Three connected projects are in course at the present. With my team, we are surveying and interviewing family clinicians in Spanish and English speaking countries to assess how families seeking help are being affected by the adoption of emerging technologies. Similarly, we are beginning fieldwork in Mexico and the U.S. to learn of how transnational families utilize emerging technologies. I believe that the wide penetration of new technologies questions some of the ways in which scholars have conceptualized the immigrant experience and thus how professionals and policy-makers design interventions directed to them. Finally, we have found that ICTs are a core aspect of the teenage experience, interviews with teenagers in the Basque Country, as part of another study, teaches about the relevancy of moving beyond media stereotypes about their adoption by youth. In sum, this research line connects technology, families, and adds a cross-cultural and transnational dimension.

Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Family, Psychology, Research, technology, Transnational

Precautionary Notes Before Sending Post-Disaster Experts to Work Abroad: My Chilean Earthquake by Gonzalo Bacigalupe

Precautionary Notes Before Sending Post-Disaster Experts to Work Abroad: My Chilean Earthquake Late on February 27, 2010 by @bacigalupe

The situation in Chile is not easy, it is really sad, and it seems to be getting worst almost 24 hours after the earthquake today. The CNN coverage was not very accurate (alarmist at the start, inaccurate towards the end). The New York Times has been reporting about Chile with its regional correspondents in Brazil! For the most part, the best coverage has been accessible via Chilean TV (TVN 24 via ustream or radios accessible via the internet like Radio BioBio) and in particular via social media venues like Twitter and Facebook

The center-south coastal areas are the most affected, with several towns affected by real Tsunami events. The government and the private organizations seem to have reacted well to one of the worst earthquakes in world history (with an intensity hundreds of times more powerful than Haiti).                    Imagenes de CHILE

Chile is resilient, united, but this is a serious, traumatic, and truly dramatic natural disaster. Personally my direct family is healthy, a lot of destruction at homes; inside my parents apartment there are a lot of stuff destroyed, something we should expect, saw it at least once in my childhood; no water, it will probably be back tomorrow; some electricity, will probably be back off and on in the next days; spotty phone connection, some internet but almost back tonight. A few hours ago, I was informed that a cousin’s mother in-law died during the earthquake after a wall collapsed while she was sleeping. I still don’t know about some relatives but they should be OK is just that phones are not available. Being an immigrant under these circumstances it is probably one of the most difficult times an immigrant goes through, we will survive though. Being a professional or highly educated immigrant living abroad raises another layer of reflections for me too.

Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: Community, Psychology, Transnational

Social media, satellite communications spring into action to help earthquake-devastated Haiti

Social media, satellite communications spring into action to help earthquake-devastated Haiti

The federal government is playing a major role in earthquake relief and recovery efforts in Haiti, aided by an array of technology tools, some of which were not been available in past disasters. Social media, satellite communications and other innovations could make a real difference as the battered island nation struggles to regain some degree of normalcy.

Social media tools, significantly Twitter and Facebook are playing a major role in communicating information about the effort. The State Department began sharing information on its official Facebook pages hours after the earthquake struck.

One post told people who want to donate money or provide assistance whom to contact. Persons responding to the post shared other ways to provide assistance.

State’s Web site points people wishing to donate or provide assistance to theCenter For International Disaster Information. The center operates under a grant from the United States Agency for International Development’s Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance and support from IBM. Continue reading

Filed under: Community, Organization, technology, Transnational

Real-Time Search, Social Networks Help Organizations Mobilize for Haiti Relief by AdMedia

Original Blog Entry at AdMedia

For the citizens of Haiti, real-time search may have arrived just in time. The 7.0 earthquake that shook the poverty-stricken nation hit just 5 hours ago, but you can easily find information about the disaster, and, most importantly organizations to donate to.

On each of the top four search engines, searching “Haiti relief” yielded extremely useful information. Google and Bing were the most comprehensive:

Screen shot 2010-01-12 at 10.31.11 PM.png

Continue reading

Filed under: Community, Organization, technology, Transnational

Twitter Stream

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.