, May 05, 2024

0 results found in this keyword

Research on Why Some Filipinos Support Tokhang


  •   3 min reads
Research on Why Some Filipinos Support Tokhang
The drug war introduced under former president Rodrigo Duterte led to the deaths of thousands. : Ryomaandres/Wikimediacommons Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International

People’s moral reasoning involved making sense of who the agents and victims are and their perceived intentions.

The Philippine Government’s war on drugs has caused the deaths of thousands, and many Filipinos have expressed support for the policy.

Many of these killings were carried out under what the policy called “Project Tokhang” — officially described by the Philippine National Police as “the conduct of house-to-house visitations to persuade suspected illegal drug personalities to stop their illegal drug activities”.

One way to understand why a morally questionable policy can gain such popularity is by considering how people make sense of harm differently.

Research analysing Filipino young adults’ moral justifications for the policy shows how the information which is available, accessible and relevant to them can be used to justify their position.

It found people’s moral reasoning involved making sense of who the agents and victims are and their perceived intentions.

Those who supported the policy blamed drug war victims for being guilty of crimes and bringing harm to themselves and others, echoing Duterte’s comments on criminality and the dehumanisation of drug users.

They also saw the police as potentially vulnerable victims acting in self-defence according to protocols, reflecting Duterte’s administration’s widely-circulated, but unsupported claims, that those who were killed were suspects who fought or resisted arrest — creating a grey area justifying the use of deadly force.

In cases where the killing was clearly intentional and lacked signs of resistance, those in support of tokhang portrayed perpetrators as acting independently of the policy, such as corrupt rogue policemen and unidentified vigilantes. Those who disagreed with the policy highlighted the vulnerability of those killed by the police in drug operations, drawing from messages on the disproportionate victimisation of the poor and social circumstances which lead to drug addiction.

They magnified the policy’s harmfulness, emphasising the government’s alleged intentions by allowing the police to actively cause harm. They also recognise the innocent and vulnerable victims beyond the supposed targets of police operations, including children and family members. For the most part though, people’s positions were not so clear-cut.

In many cases, ambiguity was made possible by grey areas created by two crucial factors.

Seeing the policy, and by extension, the administration and the police as having good intentions and benefits for rehabilitating drug users and maintaining peace and security. And a lack of clarity about the circumstances surrounding individual killings.

So when the intentions are made out to be good and the cause of harm is unclear, it becomes more difficult to condemn the policy outright.

While the study focused on a limited range of respondents and a distinct issue in one country, these patterns can resonate across different contexts and help understand how people make sense of policies and policing.

People draw from, combine and reconstruct messages about victims and perpetrators of harm to come to their own moral conclusions and justifications. But people’s ability to produce different positions also depends on the accessibility and relevance of these different messages based on individuals’ characteristics and context.

When these messages are more accessible and people have more opportunities to express their position, they can adopt positions more consistently and easily.

The challenge then is to find ways for messages consistent with a just society to multiply and gain more traction. More avenues for respectful deliberation overall would hopefully contribute to better discussions beyond echo chambers.

Danielle P. Ochoa is an associate professor at the University of the Philippines, Diliman Department of Psychology. She is currently the secretary of the National Association for Sikolohiyang Pilipino.

This research was funded by the University of the Philippines Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs Local Faculty Fellowship and the Philippine Social Science Council Research Award Program.

The author declares no conflict of interest.

This is an excerpt of an article originally published under Creative Commons by 360info™. You can read the original article here.


Authors
Danielle P. Ochoa
University of the Philippines

Editors
Tasha Wibawa
Commissioning Editor, 360info Asia-Pacific

DOI
10.54377/bd7b-66dc



Related Posts

You've successfully subscribed to Our Brew
Great! Next, complete checkout for full access to Our Brew
Welcome back! You've successfully signed in
Success! Your account is fully activated, you now have access to all content.
Success! Your billing info is updated.
Billing info update failed.
Your link has expired.