{"id":2132,"date":"2015-03-18T16:51:11","date_gmt":"2015-03-18T08:51:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/sex.ncu.edu.tw\/jo_article\/?p=2132"},"modified":"2021-07-03T10:26:46","modified_gmt":"2021-07-03T02:26:46","slug":"gender-and-diversity-in-taiwan-a-view-outside-the-legal-and-policy-framework","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sex.ncu.edu.tw\/jo_article\/2015\/03\/gender-and-diversity-in-taiwan-a-view-outside-the-legal-and-policy-framework\/","title":{"rendered":"Gender and Diversity in Taiwan: A View Outside the Legal and Policy Framework"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\">\u3010\u9019\u662f\u62112015\u5e743\u670818\u65e5\u53d7\u9080\u5728\u00a0Foundation for Scholarly Exchange (Fulbright Taiwan)\u4e3b\u8fa6\u7684\u653f\u5927\u5de5\u4f5c\u574a\u4e2d\u7684\u77ed\u8b1b\u3011<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>It has been suggested to us that we come up with \u201cthree things to know about gender and diversity in Taiwan.\u201d \u00a0As the other panelists may have more to say on the issue of ethnic diversity, I will concentrate my observations on the gender\/sexuality scene.\u00a0 So here is my 10-minute worth of contribution at the risk of over-simplification, and whatever implications would be applicable to Hong Kong or China will be at your discretion.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps one initial response to this assignment would be an answer to the question of \u201chow or why gender and diversity emerged to become noteworthy issues for Taiwan?\u201d \u00a0Or, \u201chow did the unique socio-historical trajectories of modernization in Taiwan foster different configurations of gender and diversity for the local context?\u201d\u00a0 An adequate answer would be impossible within today\u2019s given time frame, so I will venture only to say this.<\/p>\n<p>The profoundly religious, i.e. fiercely defensive, Christian culture that the US has been endowed with through its history finds only a minority presence in Taiwan.\u00a0 The distinctly class-based racial structure of the US that continues to intensify racial tensions and conflicts in the US is much less manifest here.\u00a0 In other words, if gender and diversity in the American culture are usually marked by strong convictions and deeply-engrained emotions, consolidated through fierce social struggles against religious forces and racial traditions since the 1960s; in contrast, since the 1990s most Taiwanese\u2019 desire for the modern notion of equality that include gender and diversity is, at most, instrumental.\u00a0 For these values were propelled to their politically correct status by the public\u2019s pervasive aspiration to attain respectable international image and hopefully unproblematic nation-state status.\u00a0 Consequently, much of these performances of modernity and civility are at best nominal or ceremonial: politicians stand to gain from presenting themselves as progressive and politically correct in relation to gender matters, while civil servants now grudgingly carry out required gender-equality tasks to meet the demands of quarterly evaluations of the gender mainstreaming project every year.<\/p>\n<p>As history has it, this tendency toward a performative notion of gender equality and diversity encountered only limited resistance from traditional Chinese culture, as the new values and attitudes were enabled by the concentration of culturally-privileged Mainlanders in the urban cities of northern Taiwan where political and economic powers congeal.\u00a0 In a matter of two decades, gender equality, as it is embodied in UN-decreed gender mainstreaming, has developed into an intense presence in the legal and administrative realms in Taiwan, hence also making it a key force in the drive toward more social discipline and regulation to achieve social order and security.\u00a0 Implemented with limited conviction but ample legal rigidity, and performed through a myriad of gestures of bureaucracy and shadow-boxing, gender equality and diversity are unwittingly generating an undercurrent of distaste and hostility that is becoming only thinly veiled by half-hearted respect and patronizing amiability toward the so-called weak minority, be they women, lesbians and gays, teenagers, indigenous peoples, migrants, etc..<\/p>\n<p>As claims of gender equality and diversity are closely linked to the aspiration for and performance of modernity and civility in Taiwan, their legalized enforcement on campuses and in work places tend to work <strong>with<\/strong> traditional disciplinary measures of surveillance and regulation than <strong>against<\/strong> structures of power already in place in those locations.\u00a0 I will now move on to a couple of real-life stories to illustrate the consequences of such development.<\/p>\n<p>One of our graduate students is now teaching in a local high school and she reports that after stringent sexual-harassment prevention regulations were set up and advocated among students, a number of obvious cases of sexual harassment have been reported and dealt with since 2005, but much more frequent are harassment cases reported by young girl students who have discovered that their boyfriends are befriending other girls. \u00a0Sweet intimate contact one evening could be interpreted as sexual harassment overnight when the boy\u2019s multiple relationships are discovered.\u00a0 But this is by no means the girl\u2019s act of simple \u201crevenge\u201d on the boy\u2019s infidelity as many would think.\u00a0 Closer to the truth is that it is the girl\u2019s defensive act against feeling being duped.\u00a0 The logic goes like this: if you are dating someone else, that means you did not mean it when you were intimate with me last night, then you were merely taking advantage of me.\u00a0 And as sexual harassment is understood as taking advantage of someone, the charge provides the girl a convenient way to exonerate herself from being seen as imprudent.\u00a0 Unfortunately, once the harassment charge is filed, the sword of punishment resolutely descends upon the male, and any chance for all to explore the complexities and contradictions of modern intimate relationships, or to interrogate the reins of monogamy and fidelity, is also lost.<\/p>\n<p>Another graduate student who teaches at a junior high school also reports that in Taiwan, as girl\u2019s subjective feelings of discomfort and embarrassment are deemed as the sole criterion for determining whether sexual harassment has taken place or not, the students most often accused of sexual-harassment are often those LGBT students who are supposed to be vulnerable and hence to be protected by the idea of the LGBT-friendly campus.\u00a0 These students are accused because they are quite liberal when talking about sexual acts and sexual fantasies with their peers, and the discomfort of those who are inexperienced or uncomfortable with open discussions of sex then becomes ground to indict those who are at ease with sexual matters.\u00a0 A clash of values and sentiments is subjected to arbitration by the sexual harassment prevention regulations designed in the first place to protect the vulnerable.\u00a0 Except, here, claims of vulnerability are reserved only for the sexually pure, never those who are the first ones to suffer the blunt of sexual stigma.\u00a0 And talk of diversity is instantly silenced in the face of gender-based complaints of infringement.<\/p>\n<p>So far I have alluded to the bureaucratization of gender and diversity in Taiwan, and the ironic but true consequences of protection-oriented, mostly gender-based measures of sexual harassment prevention.\u00a0 Lastly, I would like to say something about diversity education in relation to gender\/sexuality.\u00a0 One FTM transgender activist has once said, and I quote: \u201cOur seemingly diverse gender equality education puts its emphasis only on the diversity of empty, nominal <strong>identities<\/strong>, not the diversity of concrete, actual <strong>lives<\/strong>.\u201d\u00a0 He then complained about how diversity education in the schools is most often carried out by listing recognized slots on the spectrum of gender and sexuality identities and teaching students about the definition of each term in the growing family of abbreviations of LGBTQISQ&#8230;etc.\u00a0 The list is then followed by the language of respect and tolerance as a basic civic moral value.\u00a0 Such a program, in his words, is more interested in fitting subjects to fixed identities than helping them explore the vagueness, the multiplicities, and the fluidities that subjects face in their formation of identities and affects.<\/p>\n<p>Furthermore, the diversity spectrum may seem warmly open and welcoming, but in fact it is always marked by an underlying exclusivity.\u00a0 As my transgender friend has noted, seemingly nice and obedient subjects can always win social approval and support with their pitiful sobbing stories of victimization; while others suffer chastisement because they insist on using dirty language, they always act noncompliantly, and they rely upon self-empowering tricks to face up to daily life\u2019s every difficulty through minor acts of lying and cheating, running away from home, selling sex on the internet, and other minor illegalities just to secure some warmth and balance.\u00a0 These acts are often their only recourse for survival, and the harsh indictment they suffer exposes the real logic and moral demand behind the rewards of equality and respect.\u00a0 As my transgender friend says frankly, \u201cif you suffer and persevere without taking shortcuts or bending the rules, living up to a perfect victimization story, then you are worthy of sympathy.\u00a0 But no allowance is made for those who refuse to buy into mainstream values and still expect respect and support.\u201d \u00a0Respect is awarded only when obedience and good behavior are offered.<\/p>\n<p>To conclude, it has been common to look to laws and policies and statistics to determine a nation\u2019s achievement in gender equality and diversity.\u00a0 But as I hope I have been able to demonstrate, laws and policies do not produce the fundamental changes that we hope to foster through work in the social and cultural realms.\u00a0 When social activism is concentrated solely on the legal and political realms, it gives rise to what I have termed \u201cthe human rights vultures\u201d in Taiwan in recent years.\u00a0 These are political figures who have lost their platform elsewhere but are desperately seeking issues for their own political reemergence.\u00a0 They are usually much more glib with political language and political lobbying, and they are good at creating media effects that move the movements further into the legal and policy realm where they themselves have more to play with.\u00a0 This is another recent problem facing gender\/sexual activism.\u00a0 Thank you.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"color: #ff0000;\">\u8f49\u8f09\u672c\u6587\u8acb\u4fdd\u7559\u7db2\u9801\u8a3b\u8a18<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<input type=\"hidden\" id=\"url2132\" class=\"posturl\" value=\"https:\/\/sex.ncu.edu.tw\/jo_article\/2015\/03\/gender-and-diversity-in-taiwan-a-view-outside-the-legal-and-policy-framework\/\" \/>\n\t\t\t\t\t<input type=\"hidden\" id=\"com2132\" class=\"postcom\" value=\"0\" 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