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THE STATUS OF VIETNAMESE FAMILIES IN AUSTRALIA ALOSS OF TRADITION? James E. Coughlan and Sandra M. Walsh Department of Psychology and Sociology School of Behavioural Sciences James Cook University of North Queensland Townsville , Queensland , 4811 Australia 0James E. Coughlan and Sandra M . Walsh, 1994. 111111011111 111111011111111 303820411M 1. INTRODUCTION The often stereotypical portrai t of the Vietnamese family in Australia is one of an intact harmonious extended patriarchal family. It is generally assumed that elderly Vietnamese are universally respected within the family and the community, and that children are well-behaved and studious. Although this idyllic image is advance b y some members of the Vietnamese community, both in Viet Nam and in the diaspora, it is in fact a gross misrepresentation of the reality of contemporary Vietnamese-Australian families. The elderly are not universally respected , and it is estimated b y Vietnamese community welfare workers that about 5 000 elderly Vietnamese-Australians are either homeless or have been abandoned by their children. A similar number of Vietnamese youth are homeless , generally because they have run away from home , being unable to cope with the traditional demands f o r respect and unquestioned obedience b y their parents. Notions of traditional Confucian filial piety and respect for the elderly are becoming increasingly irrelevant to the Vietnamese community in the post -industrial post -modern Australia of the 1990s. To comprehensively discuss the changing nature of the Vietnamese family in Australia it would be necessary to consider the position of women and children in the Vietnamese community, as well as notions of the dependence, obedience and sexuality, that alone the importance of the interaction of the Australian welfare system on the functioning of the Vietnamese family. Such an exercise would be lengthy and is beyond the scope of this paper. What the paper seeks to do, however, is to provide a brief overview of the Vietnamese family in contemporary Australia based on the personal observations of the f i rst author from involvement in the Vietnamese-Australian community over the past two decades. At the time of the 1991 Census, there were 122 318 Viet Nam-born persons in Australia, representing 3.3 per cent of the overseas -born population and 0.7 per cent of the total Australian population . There were also a further 25 151 Australia-born persons who reported that one or both parents had been born in Viet Nam ( the second generation ). Currently there are an estimated 145 000 Viet Nam-born people in Australia, together with approximately 35 000 second generation Vietnamese. The Viet Nam-born community is the fourth largest overseas-born g r o u p in Australia, after the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Italy-born communities. The ethnic Vietnamese community, of about 120 000 people, comprise the second largest Asian community in Australia after the ethnic Chinese. The substantial cultural, economic , environmental, political and social differences which exist between contemporary Viet Nam and Australia has meant that the Vietnamese family institution in Australia has been subjected o t enormous forces which have caused a metamorphosis of this institution. Families , like the societies wit hin which they are located , are generally not static institution, b u t are in a continuous state of f l u x. Thus families are constantly being remoulded and relations within the family, especially power relations , are continuously being reaffirmed and renegotiated. The remoulding or metamorphosis of the Vietnamese family in Australia has not been painless , and has frequently been a cause of anguish for family members. Considering the relatively large size of the Vietnamese community in Australia and the substantial socio-cultural differences between Viet Nam and Australia this paper seeks to consider some of the changes which have taken place within Vietnamese families since their immigration to Australia. The paper commences with a brief consideration of conceptualisations of the notion of family in Viet Nam , and then briefly considers a theoretical conceptualisation of the family, followed b y a short statistical overview of Vietnamese families in Australia from the 1991 Australian Census of Population and Housing. From this brief background information the paper then considers the major changes which have taken place within Vietnamese families in Australia over the past decade or so. This discussion is primarily based on two decades of personal involvement with the Vietnamese community in Australia b y the first author and ethnographical research conducted with 450 Vietnamese families in Melbourne, Victoria , during 1990-91. The paper concludes with a discussion of the observations presented and poses some predictions of the f u t u r e of the Vietnamese family institution in Australia in light of Australia 's contemporary economic climate and changes in Vietnamese conceptualisations of the family institution. 2. BACKGROUND Compared to most other large Asian countries little has been written about society and social relations in Viet Nam over the past two millennia ( Haines 1984: 307 ). But even in modern times there has been relatively little academic writing about Vietnamese society and the family. Much of the material which has emanated f r o m northern Viet Nam from the middle of the twentieth century until the mid1980s has been so much influenced b y Marxist ideology that it provides little insight into the t r u e nature of Vietnamese social history . At the same time a substantial amount of the southern Vietnamese research is based on village or local community anthropological studies conducted b y American anthropologists from the mid-1950s o t the mid-1970s. It has only been in the past decade that quality scholarly work on Vietnamese families and women has been produced in Viet Nam , and here the outstanding, though not well circulated , works of Professor Le Thi Nham Tuyet and Dr Le Thi Quy stand alone. However, in general Vietnamese scholars have devoted little attention o t writing about social conditions and change in Vietnamese society and the family ( Far Eastern Economic Review 29 July 1993: 49)? and thus , apart from the works of Professor Le Thi Nham Tuyet and Dr Le Thi Quy, our best understanding of the Vietnamese family and society during the twentieth century have come from the semi-fictional novels of the renown Vietnamese authors Duyen Anh , Khai Hung and Nhat Linh.1 It is also important to note that traditional Vietnamese literature generally does not provide an accurate historical portrayal of Vietnamese society. For example, Hoang notes that ; The traditional literature of Vietnam u p to the late nineteenth century—writings in Chinese and in chu nom ( Chinese characters used for writing Vietnamese ) — expressed the point of view of an elite minority, the Confucian learned class. ( Emphasis in original) ( 1968: iv)' Yeager ( 1987: 37) also supports the proposition that the writings of Khai H u n g and Nhat Linh are realistic descriptions of Vietnamese family and society during the second quarter of the twentieth century; just as much of the work of Charles Dickens reflected the life in English society during his life-time. Scholars such as Rambo ( 1973: 201-203 } also make use of Vietnamese literature to achieve an understanding of earlier Vietnamese society. See also Hoang ( 1968: 82-83, 507 ). Thus the perceptions that family may be expected o t romanticise the past , not status quo, of which they these traditional literatures convey of the Vietnamese be misleading . Additionally , many Vietnamese authors only in order to glorify it , but also to maintain the are at the pinnacle ( Hammer 1966: 218-219 ). I n order o t obtain an appreciation of the Vietnamese family it is necessary to provide a brief overview of the changing status of women in Vietnamese history. In ancient Lac Viet society women played a prominent role in the family and society in general, and had substantially more freedom than in subsequent Vietnamese history. For example, women possessed the initiative and freedom to select their spouse, and after marriage the husband had to move in with his wife 's family, the converse of contemporary Vietnamese society ( Mai and Le 1978: 15-16). These practices , although no longer present in mainstream contemporary Vietnamese society, may still be found in some of the minority hill-tribe groups in northern Viet Nam ( Rambo 1987: 120). However, during the period just prior to the Chinese domination Vietnamese society began to alter substantially with the formation of social classes and a movement away from a matriarchal basis to one of patriarchy. These changes did not permeate all Lac Viet as in some geographical regions change did not take place for centuries after the imposition of Chinese rule, and t h u s there were regional variations in family and societal structures. The introduction of a Confucian hierarchy of status lead o t a conflict between Vietnamese customs and Confucian modes , effecting a transformation of urban Vietnamese society during the first millennia (Yu 1978: 43; Wiegersma 1982: 30 ). Between the thirteenth and fifteenth centuries Confucianism had become the central ideological doctrine of urban Vietnamese society, and o was t subsequently have a marked influence on the social structure and relations of Vietnamese society ( Mai and Le 1978: 31-32 ), with bhe general exception of rural communities which retained a fair degree of autonomy from central government control ( Whitmore 1984: 298 ). Although Confucian philosophy significantly shaped the government of Vietnam , it never became the ordering principle of thought and action f o r the whole of society as was the case in China. I n the villages of Vietnam, for example, beliefs and practices of a local and primarily atomistic nature prevailed right through the centuries, essentially untouched b y Confucianism. B y contrast, the Mahayanist form of Buddhism which entered Vietnam brought with it an elaborate pantheon and liturgy which suited rather better the supernatural convictions already held b y the Vietnamese peasantry. ( Truong Buu Lam 1982: 5 ) Despite the effects of Confucian doctrine on society and changes in the conceptualisation of the Vietnamese family, within the family women still maintained astrong degree of influence on the household 's decision making processes and had higher social status than their sisters in China at that time ( Mai and Le 1978: 67-68 ; Whitmore 1984: 300; 1987a: 14-15; Ta 1988: 110-132; Wolters 1988: 11-12). The Vietnamese family during the middle of this millennia was not the large extended family, as was the situation in China, but rather a nuclear family of parents and children, with the possibility of other relatives being attached ( Whitmore 1984: 299; Wolters 1988: 12 ).° The southern-most regions of Viet Nam , south of present-day Ho Chi Minh City ( Sai Gon), were settled in the seventeenth Possibly the most readily available comprehensive discussion of family and social life in Viet Nam during the 17th and 18th centuries may be f o u n d in Yu ( 1978). and eighteenth centuries b y Vietnamese people who were both spatially and culturally f a r removed from the Vietnamese rulers in Ha Noi. Due to the different climatic and physical geographical condition s between the two regions , life in the southern region of Viet Nam was much easier than in the north. This fostered a situation in which southern Vietnamese people were more open minded and 'were especially less bound o t traditions and the restrictive influence of Confucianism than the conservative people of Tonking and Annam [ northern and central Viet Nam ]' (Nguyen and Tran 1980: 8). The culture and society developed b y the pioneering people in southern Viet Nam was not only influenced b y their Chinese and Confucianist root s in northern Viet Nam , as well as strong direct Chinese influences ( Rambo 1973: 323-333), but also b y the Cham, Indian and Khmer cultural influences which were prevalent amongst the peoples who originally inhabited southern Viet Nam prior to the arrival of the pioneering Vietnamese ( Hickey 1971: 134; 1987: 16-18; Rambo 1973: 336-347; Tai 1987: 136). The arrival of Christian missionaries in Viet Nam proved o t be a major challenge to traditional life and initiated another metamorphosis of Vietnamese social hierarchy and structure. Due in part to the emigration from the northern deltas in the period just prior o t French colonialism , there were substantial cultural differences between the three geographical areas of Viet Nam , which the French labelled Tonking ( northern Viet Nam ), Annam ( central Viet Nam ) and Cochinchina ( southern Viet Nam ). Vietnamese society at this time was an amalgam of older Vietnamese traditions , blended with Chinese and neighbouring South East Asian cultures ( Adams and Hancock 1970: 90; Rambo 1987: 121). Central and northern Viet Nam had the highest conformity to Vietnamese traditions, while the frontier southern Vietnamese society was more pliable and prone to adopt new ideas ( Adams and Hancock 1970: 90). These differences also extended to the social structure of villages and the family. As Hickey observed: 'The ranked sociopolitical hierarchy of Northern and Central Vietnamese villages does not exist in the South' ( Hickey cited in Rambo: 1973: 45 ). At the same time, southern Vietnamese adopted more of the aspects of other South East Asian cultures and notions of the family than their compatriots in central and northern Viet Nam ( Tai 1987: 136). An understanding of the majority of Vietnamese society , which has always been essentially a rural society, prior o t French colonisation may be best obtained through Vietnamese folk culture, such as songs, rather than through literature which was written b y the predominantly urban male Confucian-educated literati. The social reality of Vietnamese rural life is accurately portrayed through folk songs, rather than traditional Vietnamese poetry which depicts the lives of the urban upper classes imbued b y Confucian culture ( Hoang 1968: 25-26 , 82-83). comparison of rural and urban cultural material indicates that the traditional rural Vietnamese woman had more freedom than her Confucianistinfluenced urban sisters , and substantially more freedom than her Chinese contemporaries ( Hoang 1968: 29; Ta 1981: 100). Variations in gender relations and family structure were more due to urban and rural class differences, and thus cultural differences, than to other factors. Hoang ( 1968: 23 ) observes that: 'It seems that the Confucian precept of separation between males and females was only observed in the upper class of the traditional society' and that there was greater gender equality in non-Confucianist rural Viet Nam. The famous eighteenth century poetess Ho Xuan Huong wrote poetry which many Vietnamese, even today , regard as being crude and shockingly transparent in the sexual innuendo. However, her poetry was a reflection of reality within the upper Confucian classes of the Viet Nam of her time. She also frequently used folk songs to express her ideas ( Hoang 1968: 60 ). French colonialism brought with it an ubiquitous revolution. Western philosophies and ideas were introduced o t Viet Nam through European missionaries and other travellers who visited and worked in Viet Nam from the seventeenth century, and these were the first major confrontation between Western and Confucianist traditions in Viet Nam. Confrontation with traditional Confucianist beliefs was most pronounced in the areas of French concentration , that is mainly in the cities and o t a lesser extent in the towns and villages in proximity to the French military outposts ( M u s 1949; 265; Hess 1977: 32-33; Truong Buu Lam 1987: 43). I n most rural areas there was little change in cultural tradition and family structures as Western concepts infrequently filtered into these localities , although economic , political and social effects of French colonialism were felt throughout Viet Nam ( McAlister 1969: 75-76). However , some traditional social structures, especially the relationship between emperor and village , the basic unit of Vietnamese society at the time , were destroyed under French rule (Hammer 1954: 62-68; Woodside 1976: 118-148; Maranto and Tuchman 1992: 252-254 ). I n addition to the above changes in Vietnamese society there were important demographic changes. Prior to French colonisation there were only two cities in Viet Nam: H u e and Ha Not. The French presence heralded a rapid urbanisation which lead to Sai Gon becoming Viet Nam 's largest city, with a population of 120 000 people ( 76 000 Vietnamese, 34 000 Chinese and 10 000 others ) in 1931 {Woodside 197la: 39 ). The movement of people from their ancestral villages o t the new cities threatened the two principal axes. of Vietnamese society - family cohesion and village solidarity ( Yeager 1987: 19). U p until the Second World War this movement was primarily a result of French economic activity, especially in southern Viet Nam. However, with the onset of the First Indochina War , predominantly in northern Viet Nam , rural people began to flee the fighting and sought refuge in towns and cities. This in t u r n motivated the development of new types of social organisations in the cities and changes in family relations and structures, especially in northern However , it also should be noted that this time in Viet Nam was a period of social and political turmoil and corruption, where everything a n d anything could be bought; a period when Confucianism was crumbling. Hess ( 1977: 14 ) essentially supports the above proposition b y noting that sexual promiscuity 'was looked upon as characteristic of the manners of the lower class Vietnamese .' However, as noted in the poetry of Ho Xuan Huong , the upper classes were equally , if not more , sexually promiscuous. For an excellent and insightful discussion , based primarily on contemporary Vietnamese fictional literature, of the concept of the traditional Vietnamese family at this time see Jamieson ( 1986b). French influence on Vietnamese villages during the French colonial period has been much debated. See Hess ( 1977: 415-416 ) for a brief presentation of the competing literatures. One of the most comprehensive considerations of social change since the 1880s within a northern Vietnamese village context may be found in Luong and Nguyen ( 1992). The validity of this proposition needs to be questioned as we are aware of the nam tien ( southern expansion ) movement and the traditional seasonal migration of rural labourers ( Beresford 1988: 71-72, 213). Thus throughout Vietnamese history there has been a certain degree of permanent and temporary movement away from ancestral villages , without, it appears, an adverse impact upon family cohesion and village solidarity. Viet Nam ( Woodside 1971a ). The increased unemployment and hunger also created an escalation of robbery and prostitution ( of males and females) as people struggled to survive (Hoang 1968: 230 , 239-240). The disruption in northern Viet Nam during the late 1940s and early 1950s caused a number of northern Vietnamese to migrate to Sai Gon and other locations in southern Viet Nam ( Hess 1977: 89-90 ) , thereby weakening the extended family structure of northern Vietnamese society. The introduction of communist ideology into North Viet Nam brought a change in economic and political ideology, as well as a desire to change social relations , one of the most important of which was the abolition of Confucianist beliefs within Vietnamese society (Nguyen Khac Vien 1974: 46-47 ). Especially targeted was the basic unit of Vietnamese society, the family, where the objective was to modify family relations so that individual loyalty was transfered f r o m the family to the state. This transformation was not aimed at destroying the family unit per se, b u t reversing Confucian family philosophy b y having the state replace the family as each individual's primary responsibility ( Hoang 1968: 278-279 ). An additional objective was the destruction of the established social order , though it has been argued that this objective achieved only limited success ( Honey 1963). Following the 1954 Geneva Accords , 768 672 Northern Vietnamese refugees were transported b y American and French carriers to southern Viet Nam with an estimated additional 109 000 people arriving without assistance ( Wiesner 1988: 6 ). The communist ascended in North Viet Nam often induced family divisions along political lines , with possibly children , or even spouses, actively supporting different sides in the conflict ( Hammer 1966: 213; H u n t 1982: 147). This in t u r n caused an increased destabilisation and restructuring of Vietnamese society and families ( Wiesner 1988: xvii-xviii , 96-97). The inflow of the Northern Vietnamese refugees caused massive disruption throughout South Viet Nam , and the use of some of the refugees as political instruments b y successive Southern Vietnamese governments, but especially the Catholic President Ngo Dinh Diem , alienated large portions of the predominantly peasant Buddhist Southern Vietnamese society ( Wiesner 1988: 17-18). The same source used b y Wiesner ( 1988: 8} later provides a higher f i g u r e of 928 152, though the former figure is the most widely cited figure. I n an informative footnote Doan and Chanoff noted that: Under [ South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van ] Thieu , the sarcastic Vietnamese reorganised the traditional [ social ] hierarchy [of intellectual, farmer, craftsman and merchant , i.e. nhat si, nhi nong, tar n cong , tu thuong} to nhat tuong, nhi cha, tar n ma, tu d i' that is, generals, priests, puppets ( i.e., those with American university degrees) , and finally prostitutes. ( Emphasis in original) ( 1986: 34 ) However , Luce and Sommer offer an alternative view , from the perspective of wealth. "Nhat di, nhi tuong ", goes the new Vietnamese expression first t he prostitutes, second the generals. To the cynical, this represents the current hierarchy. The scholars and intellectuals , respected in years past , are now alienated , forgotten men , and it is the farmers a n d the workers who suffer from the direct effects of the war . ( 1970: 36 ) In the wake of the massive populations movements and economic changes of the mid-1950s there is little reliable information on changes o t Vietnamese family structure. However, a small survey of 157 employees of various firms in Sai Gon conducted in the late 1950s found that 43.9 per cent of workers were living with their nuclear family, 43.9 per cent were living with their extended family, 5.7 per cent were living with friends and 6.4 per cent were boarding and living without family members ( Hendry 1960: 64). This provides some evidence that urban Vietnamese people of the day lived in a variety of family situations, not all of which were the traditional conceptualisation of an extended family. Commenting on his survey Hendry goes on to note: Adisproportionate number of divorced women seem to enter the work force. The overall pattern of family structure [in Sai Gon ] probably differs to some extent from that which would be found in rural areas , but the findings do not contain anything which , on the surface at least , indicates rapid or extreme breakdown or traditional family relationships as a result of industrialization. ( 1960: 68 ) While the position of women in South Viet Nam improved after the Second World War , as middle class urban women gained more authority within the family ( Hess 1977: 115-134), there is also evidence that Vietnamese women exerted much more power in the family than was generally perceived b y outsiders and formally recognised b y scholars ( Lam Quang Thi 1986: 166-168). iu The American presence also reintroduced the notion of individualism and materialism ( Zasloff and Goodman 1972: 10) , first brought b y the French, and thus the ideal of individual material wealth became important , predominantly in major urban locations where the Americans resided (Nguyen and Tran 1980: 110-111). These philosophies , together with the introduction of other aspects of American culture, brought changes in attitudes in some quarters of Vietnamese society. However, it was the magnitude of the American presence which contributed to the extent of these changes, which in turn acted as a catalyst in stimulating changes in Vietnamese society which had been ongoing since before French colonialism . However, the extremes of wealth in South Viet Nam and the disruption of life d u e to the war created a situation where civil disruption spread and the previously virtual indestructible family solidarity became eroded. This in t u r n brought to the forefront the main traits of South Vietnamese urban society of the day selfishness a n d factionalism ( Nguyen and Tran 1980: 156). Hess makes an important observation, which will relevance: prove o t be of later During the twenty-one years of contested rule in South Vietnam between 1954 and 1975, the family continued o t provide the basis for all patterns of Confucianistic authority in Vietnamese society. By continuing to give primacy to the family above all other human 10 For a general discussion of women in contemporary Viet Nam see the diverse and extensive interviews in Mat ( 1983: 37-196). Although Luce and Sommer ( 1970: 28-34 ) indicate that the Second Indochina War had not adversely impacted upon the Vietnamese family institution, the evidence, for example Pepper ( 1967) , does not support this proposition . 12 For a comprehensive discussion of urban life in Sai Gon during the early 1960s see Hoskins and Shepherd ( 1965). The authors are unaware of a n y other publication which so comprehensively covers this issue at that time. groupings, Confucianists in South Vietnam contributed o t the institution of drastic Confucianistic role changes within their individual families and the weakening of the authority of the Republic of Vietnam. Public law and order, dependent on well-ordered families , degenerated both from erosion of individual family authority and from individual family efforts o t survive economically , spiritually, and socially. Ancestor worship , the foundation of Confucian authority, was jeopardized b y widespread Vietnamese migration away from ancestral villages throughout all regions of Vietnam. ( 1977: 84) The main result of these changes was that tradition declined in South Viet Nam during the 1960s and 1970s ( Hess 1977: 251-252 ) , which in turn changed the nature of the Southern Vietnamese urban family. This decline and these changes have been exacerbated b y the substantial economic changes in southern Viet Nam over the past two decades. Possibly the most substantial social disruption in southern and central Viet Nam , and o t a lesser degree northern Viet Nain , was that brought about b y the flight of more than two million refugees and the internment of hundreds of thousands of people , predominantly males , in re-education camps throughout Viet Nam. These events resulted in the temporary and permanent fragmentation of a large proportion of Vietnamese families , predominantly those in urban environments, the consequences of which have yet to be researched within Viet Nam. The absence of male family members from families not only changed power relations within nuclear and extended families , but also provided substantially different experiences for male and female partners. If the partners were later reunited, sometimes after a period of u p to a decade , they had o t go through a process of renegotiating their relationship. This renegotiating process was generally painful and often unsuccessful with many couples divorcing or separating. Recent research conducted in a rural area of northern Viet Nam ( Liljestrom 1987: 13-19, 27-29 ) provides evidence of a social revolution in the thinking and social life of the Vietnamese. The evidence suggests that the notion of the extended family has become obsolete in the thinking of an increasing number of Vietnamese people . One aspect of this change is that the gender imbalance within Viet Nam has created a situation where ito is, t a degree in some regions, becoming acceptable to be a single never-married mother , although this is primarily restricted o t women in their thirties or older. Le Thi ( 1987: 10) supports this proposition ; from her research in Vinh Phu province in northern Viet Nam , more than a quarter of the unmarried women are over 30 years of age, and a relatively large proportion of the never-married women have children , though this proportion is not quantified. I n contemporary Vietnamese society women have greater influence in the family and a stronger economic role in society than in Western society, which has partially resulted from the wars , where men have been forced n o it the armed services. There is generally a higher percentage of women in all industries and most professions, such as doctors and lawyers, than in most Western countries. I n the modern Vietnamese family the wife is considered virtually equal to her 13 For a discussion of village life in northern Viet Nam during the mid- to late 1970s see Houtart and Lemercinier ( 1981, 1984). 14 See also the recent article b y Murray Hiebert in the Far Eastern Economic Review ( 24 February 1994: 60-61) f o r an update on this issue. husband, unlike in Chinese societies ( Yu 1978: 2). She plays a central role in the decision making process of the family and frequently controls family finances. The above paragraphs suggest that there is no single concept of what constitutes the family norm in modern and contemporary Viet Nam. There are regional and locational ( rural-urban) differences in structural Vietnamese family norms. The paper has not , and will not , address variations in this norm which exist among the various ethnic minorities in Viet Nam. Although Vietnamese perceptions of the family may range from that of the basic nuclear family, the three generational family or the extended family including uncles, aunts, etc., the dramatic economic , political and social changes in Viet Nam since the beginning of this century have changed the notion that the Vietnamese f amily is very closeknit. These changes within Viet Nam on the notion of the family are also present among the younger generation of Vietnamese diaspora. The young diaspora do not maintain modern or traditional conceptualisations of the Vietnamese family. A growing frequency of these young ( single) Vietnamese desire to live apart from their parents, and their notions of the family are increasingly becoming dominated b y t he concept of the nuclear family, with weak bonds to the extended family, and increasingly also even their parents. 3. THE FAMILY: A THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVE There is a great deal of contention currently, in all circles of society, as to whether 'the family ' is in decline - some argue that the family is adapting o t change, others argue that it is disappearing, some suggest that the family should be abolished, whilst others defend the family and encourage the maintenance and sustaining of 'traditional family values '. This section draws on the main sociological perspective relevant to a discussion of the family and conditions of living associated with families. Talcott Parsons' theory , as it relates to the family, is specifically examined. Afunctionalist perspective emphasises the changes in functions performed b y the family and the influence this has on family forms and structure The functionalist perspective stresses that the ( Goldenberg 1987: 131). macro-social environment has a profound influence upon the family, such that changes in the larger environment may result in changes in the family ( Kornblum 1988: 396). The family is viewed as responding and adapting to changes in the macro-social environment; two significant changes implied to have impacted upon the family include urbanisation and industrialisation ( Kornblum 1988: 396). However, other changes in the macro-social environment may have potentially influenced (and may currently be influencing) the functioning, structure and form of the family - such as economic conditions , the women 's movement , the introduction of birth control tablets ( the pill ) and demographic changes ( Persell 1987; 294). The education of children has been a noted example of one of the key functions of the family that changed as a result of changes in the macro-social environment. With industrialisation and increasing occupational specialisation , educational institutions became more prominent. The education of children became the function of the school and no longer the function of the family. In his analysis , Talcott Parsons , although strongly influenced b y the classical typology tradition , adopted a structural functionalist perspective ( Goldenberg 1987: 130). Parsons regarded changes in the family ( structure, formation, etc. ) as adaptive and natural responses to the changes in the macro-social environment ( Goldenberg 1987: 131). Parsons argued that changes in society necessitated changes in the functions required of the family , thus facilitating transformations in the structure of the family ( Cuff and Payne 1984: 48; Goldenberg 1987: 131). Rationalisation , urbanisation and industrialisation were key factors, according to Parsons , that resulted in changes in family patterns f r o m the clas sical extended family to the isolated nuclear family ( Goldenberg 1987: 131). It was proposed that the isolated nuclear family ( INF ) was best suited to industrialised society, as the INF could most effectively fulfil the functions required of a family in that environment - the INF had evolved and adapted to suit the macro-social industrialised environment ( Bilton et al. 1987; C u f f and Payne 1984: 48; Goldenberg 1987: 131). Parsons posited that changes in the family occurred normatively , interactionally and structurally as the modal family pattern moved from the classical extended family to the isolated nuclear family ( Goldenberg 1987: 131). Normatively, for example , changes occur so that intervention or non-intervention across generations is stipulated ( Goldenberg 1987: 131). That is, as the modal family pattern of the classical extended family ( C E F ) evolved to the I N F, the authority of parents and grandparents normatively changed. Structural changes have occurred in conjunction with the evolution of the INF - such as the increase in the number of neolocal households and the rising importance of the family of procreation as opposed to the family of origin ( Goldenberg 1987: 132). Parsons also suggested that changes in patterns of interaction in families occurred with industrialisation - such that the increasing geographic mobility , he associated with an achievement oriented society , lead to the family of procreation being increasingly isolated from extended family networks - thus facilitating and perpetuating the predominance of the INF ( Goldenberg 1987: 132). I n essence , Parsons ' theory proposes that increasing industrialisation and urbanisation has necessitated changes in the functions of the family and has lead to increased geographic and social mobility. This has resulted in the predominance of the isolated nuclear family , which evolved to suit industrialised and urbanised societies. It was rationalised that mobility would lead o t the progressive isolation of the nuclear family and that mobility was a co-requisite of an industrialised labour system ( Goldenberg 1987: 133). Mobility was viewed as a precipitating cause of isolation because 'mobility seems likely to reduce the number of local kin available for interaction as well as reduce the interaction over time with close kin who live elsewhere' ( Goldenberg 1987: 133). Thus, Parsons inclusion of the term 'isolated ' in the concept of the 'isolated nuclear family' was deliberate and proposes the diminishing of ties and communication between the nuclear family ( or family of procreation ) and the family/ies of origin. However, Parsons ' model is not without criticism and evidence opposing Parsons ' theory has been generated from a number of sources - research within America , cross-cultural research and historical analysis. Early research indicated that working class families in America and England did in fact have quite prominent and personally important ( i.e. considered highly important b y those involved) extended kinship relationships - quite a different phenomena to that proposed b y Parsons. This research finding continued o t be an occurring theme. However , those defending Parsons ' model reiterated Parsons' earlier commentaries that suggested his model would most appropriately apply o t white middle-class Americans ( Goldenberg 1987: 135). It was considered that lower-class and/or ethnic families did not experience the mobility typical of that associated with the middle class, and that because of differences in culture, socialisation and/or values , the lower class and/ or ethnic family may have different familial attachments However , further research conducted in America with ( Goldenberg 1987: 135). upper- and middle-class families was also f o u n d not to support Parsons ' theory of the isolated nuclear family. 15 For a brief synopsis of this research see Goldenberg ( 1987). Cross-cultural research has yielded results that contest Parsons ' theory; for example, Japan has both high levels of industrialisation and urbanisation but the Japanese familial system is not isolated nuclear ( Goldenberg 1987: 138). Other criticisms suggest that Parsons has confused two phenomena - industrialisation and urbanisation. It is f u r t h e r contended that these two phenomena may occur separately or in a different sequence, that may produce quite different effects. These variations in patterns of industrialisation and urbanisation, a n d differences in effects, are not represented in Parsons' theory. Historical evidence examining household size has identified potential problems -with Parsons ' theory. 'This evidence suggests that in Britain relatively more isolated nuclear units became common prior to the advent of industrial-isolation a n d could possibly have been a necessary condition f o r that industrial development ' ( Goldenberg 1987: 138). Thus , the isolated nuclear family may have preceded industrialisation according to British historical evidence - contrary to Parsons' theory that industrialisation precipitated the emergence and predominance of the isolated nuclear family. I n addition, it could be argued that with the advances in communications technology, geographic mobility does not necessarily facilitate progressive isolation as Parsons' model stipulates. It can be reasoned that communication between the family of origin and the family of procreation does not diminish or stop as a consequence of geographic mobility , rather the communication qualitatively changes from face to face situations to communication via means such as the telephone. Similarly, changes in transportation may make traversing distances, to visit extended family , more viable for neolocal nuclear families. Thus the nuclear family need not necessarily be considered 'isolated '. Moreover , according to the conflict perspective, changes in the family have occurred because of conflict between the family and other institutions, and because of conflict within the family itself ( Kornblum 1988: 397 ). Changes in family formation, structure and functioning are all a consequence of these conflicts. For example, one of the most recent social movements that can be identified as potentially being partially responsible for today 's family is the feminist or women 's movement. The feminist movement challenged the traditional roles of women , questioning these roles both in the family and in the paid work force. Compared o t the 1960s, today there is a higher rate of divorce ( McDonald 1990: 16), a greater number of single mothers ( Wolcott 1990: 32 ) and more women in paid employment These trends may be linked to the women 's movement ( McDonald 1990: 14 ). ( McDonald 1990: 13). Thus , whilst the structural functionalist perspective of Talcott Parsons has number of inherent difficulties, it is one perspective that has particular relevance to the discussion concerning the Vietnamese family and the conditions of living associated with the Vietnamese family in the diaspora. 4. VIETNAMESE FAMILY PROFILE - FROM THE 1991 AUSTRALIAN CENSUS Due to the high cost of purchasing Australian population census data , social researchers have only limited access o t THE 1991 Census data. The following tables provide a brief statistical profile of the Viet Nam-born families in Australia , with data on the Other Asia-born families provided for comparative purposes. Note that this data is based on birthplace, and not ancestry or ethnicity, and it is possible that not all of the people in the family or household were born in Viet Nam . For example, some ethnic Chinese may have been born in China, but their children born in Viet Nam and grandchildren born in Australia. Whilst most of the ethnic Vietnamese in Australia have been born in Viet Nam , a significant proportion of t heir children have been born in Asian refugee camps or in Australia. T h u s the following tables provide a general statistical overview which may not necessarily be totally accurate. _ _ The data in Table 1 indicates that 90.0 per cent of the Vietnamese households consist of single family households , where the family may be a nuclear family , a three-generation family or an extended family. An additional 6.0 per cent of Vietnamese households comprise contain multiple families , proportionally almost twice as many as the Other Asian households in Australia. Group households and single person households are more prevalent in the Other Asiaborn community due o t the large number of Asian overseas students studying in Australia. Table 2 gives the distribution of the number of people in households b y birthplace and clearly shows that the Viet Nam-born reside in larger households than the Other Asia-born. The bottom line of the table indicates that there are about 1.2 more people in Viet Nam -born households than in Other Asia-born households. This result may be expected from the previous table as Vietnamese households have more families in them than the Other Asia-born households. It is interesting o t note that more than one in nine of the Viet Nam-born live in a household of eight or more residents. Table 1 Percentage Distribution of Household Type b y Birthplace Household Type _ _ __ __ _ _ _ Country of Birth _Viet Nam Other Asia One Family Household 90.0 89.0 Two Family Household 5.8 3.0 Three or More Family Household 0.2 0.1 Group Household 1.4 1.7 _ 2.6 _ 6.2_ _ _ _ Single Person Household _ Number of Households 12 283 48 613 Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics ( ABS ) ( 1991 Census, Table CSC6049). Percentages may not total 100.0 per cent due to rounding. 16 The Australian Bureau of Statistics ' (ABS ) definition of what constitutes a family has changed somewhat over the past decade , and is likely o t continue to change as confusion grows. For the 1991 Census a family was generally defined as parent( s ) and offspring, but may also include a widowed grandparent. According o t the ABS coding instructions a family cannot have two married or de facto couples; thus if a household offspring is married or there are a set of two grandparents in the household , as well as the married couple, then this household contains two families - the married couple as the primary family and the grandparents or married offspring as the secondary family. However, a family can comprise a couple and their offspring and other single relatives , such as aunts, nieces , cousins, etc. Thus, following the current 1991 Census convention, the family may be a nuclear family, a three-generation family or an extended family. Table 3 furnishes data on the median number of dependent offspring in the household and clearly reveals that the Vietnamese households have more dependent offspring than the Other Asia-born households. On average the Vietnamese have 43.5 per cent more dependent offspring in their households than the Other Asiaborn , while the Other Asia-born are much more likely to have no dependent offspring. The data presented in Table 4 indicate that the Vietnamese households have about the same number of elderly residents as the Other Asian households, and that there is no major variation in the distribution of the number of elderly persons in Asian households , for the birthplace categories shown. The data in the table indicate that once the 'not applicable ' cases are pro-rated only about oneeighth of the Vietnamese and Other Asian communities live in households with elderly people , with very f e w households having more than one elderly person resident. Finally , data displayed in Table 5 provide an indication of the type of family in which the Viet Nam-born and Other Asia-born reside. More than one in six Vietnamese families are single-parent families, with most of these being families with dependent children. Single parent families are much more pronounced in the Vietnamese community than in the other Asian communities. Table 2 Percentage Distribution of Number of Residents in Household b y Birthplace Number of Residents in Household _ _ _ Country of Birth Viet Nam_ Other Asia One 1.8 5.0 Two 7.0 17.1 Three 12.3 19.2 Four 19.4 25.4 Five 18.7 15.5 Six 19.8 8.7 7.9 2.4 Seven Eight or More Not Applicable ^_ Number of People Median Number of Residents in Household_ 11.3 2.0 1.9_ 4.8 122 318 5.47 565 281 4.25 Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics ( ABS ) ( 1991 Census, Table CSC6202). Percentages may not total 100.0 per cent due to rounding. ** 'Not Applicable' refers to people residing in non-private dwellings, such as college dormitories, hotels , hospitals , prisons , etc. _ Additional data presented in Coughlan ( in press) indicates that 80.0 per cent of families headed b y individuals born in Viet Nam consist of families with dependent and non-dependent offspring. Of the families which consist of only couples or two parents, 82, 2 per cent embody families where both partners where born in Viefc Nam , with an additional 13.6 per cent having one partner born in Viet Nam and the other born elsewhere in Asia and the with one partner born in Viet Nam and the other born in other countries, mostly in Australia. Only 5.0 per cent of the Viet Nam-born community live in single person families. These tables briefly inform us that more than nine-tenths of the Vietnamese households consist of a basic single family household or a single person household , and thus very f e w Vietnamese households contain multi-nuclear families. In addition, 85.2 per cent of the Viet Nam-born community living in households are not living with elderly people . The generally accepted traditional Vietnamese conception of a 3-4 generational extended family household is largely absent from the diaspora in Australia. Finally , more than one-sixth of Vietnamese families in Australia are single parent families, a statistic which reflects a greater fragmentation of the Vietnamese family in Australia than in Viet Nam . Now that we have briefly provided a statistical profile of the Vietnamese family in Australia, let us momentarily consider some of the principal factors influencing change in the Vietnamese family structure in Australia . Table 3 Percentage Distribution of Dependent Offspring in Household b y Birthplace Number of Dependent Offspring in Household _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Country of Birth _ Viet _ Nam _ Other Asia None 23.3 36.5 One 18.4 18.1 Two 23.6 24.0 Three 16.6 11.4 Four 10.1 3.9 Five 4.0 0.9 Six 1.5 0.3 Seven 0.5 0.1 Eight or More **_ Not Applicable Number of People Median Number of Dependent Offspring in _ _ Household 0.3 0.0 1^9_ 4.8 122 318 565 281 2.27 1.50 Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics ( ABS ) ( 1991 Census, Table CSC6202). Percentages may not o ta tl 100.0 per cent due to rounding. ** 'Not Applicable ' refers to people residing in non-private dwellings, such as college dormitories , hotels , hospitals, prisons , etc. Table 4 Percentage Distribution of Number of People Aged 65+ Years Old in Household b y Birthplace Number of People Aged 65+ Years Old in Household _ _ _ _ _ Country of Birth _ _ Viet Nam Other Asia None 83.6 81.8 One 10.9 9.9 Two 3.4 3.5 Three 0.2 0.1 Four 0.01 0.0 Five 0.0 0.0 Six 0.0 0.0 Seven ^_ Not Applicable Number of People Median Number of People Aged 65+ Years Old in _ Household 0.0 L9_ 4.8 122 318 565 281 0.59 0.58 Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics ( ABS ) ( 1991 Census , Table CSC6202). Percentages may not o ta tl 100.0 per cent due o t rounding. 0.0 ' implies that a number of cases are present, but their percentage of the *' total is <0.05 per cent. ** 'Not Applicable ' refers to people residing in non-private dwellings, such as college dormitories, hotels , hospitals , prisons, etc. 5. THE PRINCIPAL AUSTRALIA CAUSES OF CHANGE FOR THE VIETNAMESE FAMILY IN From our consideration of the notion of the family in Viet Nam we learnt that there is no such entity as the universal Vietnamese family type. Vietnamese families may consist of large closely -knit extended families living in close physical proximity , to small nuclear families, single-parent families, and increasingly families which comprise women who have never been married. The Vietnamese family in Australia has undergone a metamorphosis in its transitional integration n o it Australian society. This change may be due o t a large number of factors , such as adoption of Australian cultural and social norms; cultural shock; emotional stress due o t the migration process and integrating into multicultural Australian society; family fragmentation do u e t the forced separation imposed b y migration; financial pressures of re-establishing the family in Australia and continuing o t support the family in Viet Nam ; loss of ( extended ) family support networks which remain in Viet Nam ; gender role changes within the family; rejection of previous ( traditional ) norms perceived as being repressive, etc. For the convenience of this paper these factors may be grouped into three sets of factors: cultural, economic and environmental. It is impossible to comprehensively discuss how these three sets of factors influence Vietnamese families in Australia, though it is possible to briefly discuss how these factors impact Vietnamese families in Australia and cause change. Table 5 Percentage Distribution of Family Type b y Birthplace Family Type _ Country of Birth _ Viet Nam One Parent Family With Dependent Child ( ren ) One Parent Family Without Dependent Children Two Parent Family With Dependent Child ( ren ) Other Asia 15.5 9.6 2.1 2.7 67.7 59.4 Two Parent Family Without _ _ Dependent Children_ _ 14.8_ 28.3_ Number of Families _ 30 319 145 586 Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS ) ( 1991 Census, Table CSC6045). Percentages may not total 100.0 per cent due to rounding. 5.1 The Australian Environment The very cold winters of southern Australia are unwelcomed b y elderly Vietnamese, especially those who have lived most of their lives in tropical southern Viet Nam. During the coldest months in Australia some elderly Vietnamese never venture outside their dwelling for weeks or possibly months. The physical discomfort they feel restricts their physical movements beyond their dwelling, and thus restricts their role in the community and in the family. Apart from the climate , the physical structure and size of Australian housing, and local government housing regulations on the number of occupants who may reside in a dwelling , at times causes the fragmentation of families. Some families in Viet Nam lived in large 2-4 story dwellings in cities or spacious rural dwellings, which accommodated 10-20 people - middle-aged parents, their married adult children with their spouses and grandchildren - in other words , an extended family in one dwelling. Most Australian houses have only 3-4 bedrooms and apartments 2-3 bedrooms. It is physically not possible to fit one extended family , which consists of 3-4 nuclear families in one dwelling. While the families may be willing to live with the crowding , local housing regulations may set limits on the number of people able to reside in the dwelling. Because of this situation 17 What we have noticed over the years is that the Vietnamese-Australian concept of crowding moves away from the Viet Nam norm to the Australian norm as the Vietnamese-Australian integrate into Australian society. In the first f e w years having 10 adults living in a 3 bedroom home may be extended Vietnamese families may endeavour to split-u p and occupy separate dwellings in close proximity o t each other. Thus the physical structure of Western housing and Western housing regulations influence the habitation practices of Vietnamese-Australian families. However , it is probably differences between the Australian and Vietnamese economies which has the largest impact on Vietnamese families. 5.2 Differences Between the Australian and Vietnamese Economies While Viet Nam is an agrarian society with about 79.9 per cent of the population residing in rural areas ( Coughlan 1994: 37 ), Australia is a postindustrial society with 62.4 per cent of its population located in the State/Territory capital cities. During the twentieth century Australian governments have established a comprehensive and extensive welfare system, while in Viet Nam the family is the principal welfare system. While the Australian welfare system can provide financial support to the disadvantaged - single parents, the disabled , the unemployed , war veterans , etc. - in Viet Nam the disadvantaged must seek support from their family. It may be argued that in Viet Nam the lack of a comprehensive government-initiated welfare system strengthens the family; at time in Australia the welfare system has been accused of fragmenting the family. The Australian welfare system provides financial assistance to the disadvantaged, as well as other benefits and concessions , sufficient to provide the basic necessities of life. I n Australia and Viet Nam the cost of living is so high that most adult family members must work in order to support the family , though this is more crucial in Viet Nam than in Australia. While young working parents in Viet Nam may leave their young children with elderly relatives to care for them during the day, this option is often not possible in Australia either due to the relative absence of elderly parents ( see Table 4 ), or the physical separation between adult children and their parents makes daily commuting impossible. Thus the substantial differences between the Australian welfare economy and the Vietnamese family economy, as well as differences in the economic development of the two countries, provides a contrasting social environment for the Vietnamese family. However , apart from the issues already addressed , the main cause of change within Vietnamese-Australian families is the cultural differences between the two countries. 5.3 Australian and Vietnamese Cultures : A World Apart The immense differences between Asian and European cultures are readily known, and need not be enumerated here, if that were even possible. Contemporary family-centred Vietnamese culture comes face-to-face with individualcentred European culture with the Vietnamese diaspora in the West. While Vietnamese parents may attempt to instil traditional Vietnamese family values in their children within the home , they are in direct conflict with the Western media computer games, music , newspapers, television , video , etc. - in their living rooms , that alone Australian cultural norms which await them outside the physical confines of t heir homes. For young people who are spending most of t heir waking hours at Australian schools and interacting with Australian media , attempts b y Vietnamese parents to inculcate their children with Vietnamese values often looses out; their children are culturally more Australian than Vietnamese. Though they may speak Vietnamese and eat Vietnamese food , the young generation of Vietnamese-Australians who have been educated in Australian primary schools are acceptable, b u t after a few years this earlier norm is rejected and generally mainstream Australian norms adopted. more Australian than Vietnamese , though their parents and some members of the Vietnamese community may wish o t debate this issue. During the integration process it is not only young Vietnamese who are changing, b u t also young adults. It is readily acceptable that individuals at different stages of the life-cycle accept and adapt o t change in different ways, probably strongly and this difference is most felt within the family, where children adapt differently to their parents and where wives adapt differently o t husbands. During this process of adaptation and change family roles alter , or ma y even be transposed, and there are fluctuations in family power relations . Although the function of the family unit may not change duration this metamorphosis, the structure of the family changes as the roles of individual family members change, and as family members reformulate their conceptualisation of the family. The differences in Vietnamese and Australian cultures and traditions have resulted in the development of divergent institutional structures , such as the legal and welfare systems, over time . Domestic violence , though widespread , is generally abhorred in Australia , though this is less so in Viet Nam ; extra-marital affairs generally result in separation and divorce in Australia , while in modern Viet Nam they are generally considered as acceptable , though not encouraged , for males , and totally unacceptable for females. If marital problems arise in Viet Nam the aged parents of the couple, or other elderly relatives , would pressure their married children o t stay married , or at least attempt o t resolve the problem; in Australia often the elderly parents are not here , and even if they are here their opinions are neither accepted nor sought. I n Viet Nam the single parent or divorcee may become a burden on their family , in Australia they may become a burden on the welfare system . There are substantial differences in cultural attitudes and perceptions These cultural surrounding the family in Vietnamese and Australian society. differences, together with economic and environmental dissimilarities , are dictate that Vietnamese families in Australia will encounter substantial pressures as they attempt to integrate into multicultural Australian society. 6. OBSERVATIONS OF CHANGE IN THE VIETNAMESE FAMILY IN AUSTRALIA There are a number of issues which could be addressed when considering changes Vietnamese families experience after their arrival in Australia , apart from changes which may be expected from progression through the life-cycle. The two main issues which I wish o t consider here are conceptualisation of the family and closeness of the family, both of which are strongly influenced b y the age of individuals upon their arrival in Australia. The complexity of socio-cultural and economic changes within the Vietnamese community as a whole , that alone within individual Vietnamese family units, dictates that the following presentation be generalised. It is impossible, except in a detail analysis, to provide an accurate description of the broad spectrum of attitudes which Vietnamese-Australians have towards the family institution. The principal author has had almost two decades of involvement with and observation of the Vietnamese community in Australia , which has incorporated friendships with many families for almost two decades. From our experience we believe that the age at which individuals arrive in Australia is one of the main factors influencing attitudes towards existing families and to their own family formation. Basically the younger the age an individual arrives in Australia the more likely they are to deviate f r o m Vietnamese family norms; and conversely , the older an individual upon arrival in Australia the more likely they are attempt to maintain Vietnamese family norms. As noted above, young people ( taken to be school-age children) are very much influenced b y the media and schooling , and are thus more likely to adopt mainstream values as portrayed b y these institutions. B y the time many of these children become adults they remember very little about Viet Nam , and frequently have difficulty in relating to older members of the community who were raised in Viet Nam. In the family environment this results in both inter-generational and inter-cultural conflict. At times these young people see no benefit in being Vietnamese, nor in maintaining Vietnamese cultural norms. Their bonding with their parents and their culture is frequently diminished , as they desire to be seen as being Australian , and possibly Vietnamese-Australian , but not Vietnamese. This division between the young people 's attifcudinal and cultural perceptions and practices , and that of their elders , generally results in greater separation between family members , rather than the traditional closeness noted above. This separation may not only be cultural and emotional , but is more than often spatial; with spatial separation in t u r n justifying infrequent physical contact. On the other hand , Vietnamese who have arrived in Australia as adults , even if only in their mid-20s , generally seek o t maintain the notions of family which they brought with them from Viet Nam. Though these individuals may accede to some changes, such as accepting spatial separation of the family , they still seeking to remain culturally and emotionally close to their families , either through frequent physical or verbal contact , if not through correspondence. This group also are particularly close to their families in Viet Nam , and generally seek to help them as much as possible . Although the younger members of this group may accept changes in family structure due o t Australian conditions , the middle-aged and elderly often find it difficult o t accept a n y change from what was their norm in Viet Nam. For example, younger married members of this group may wish o t live with their parents or parents-in-law , though realise this is generally physically impossible due to the high cost of obtaining an appropriate dwelling , especially after children come along. I n this situation the two components of the family would probably attempt o t occupy separate dwellings within close walking distance from each other, that is in the same neighbourhood, and thus maintaining the close family relationship which was present within the family prior to emigration. Change in individual conceptualisations of the family are not only influenced b y age upon arrival in Australia , but economic circumstances are also most important in this regard. As a generalisation , in Australia Vietnamese people seem o t become more self -centred and less extended family-centred; there is no longer strong desire o t either maintain contact with or assist extended family members. Vietnamese immigrants who have recently settled in Australia work hard o t economically and socially establish themselves (and their families ) in their new homeland. When finances are available they would financially assist firstly nuclear For example, family members and then extended family members in Viet Nam. sending $2-3 000 per year to their parents, and then possibly $500 to their o t uncles, aunts, cousins , etc. brothers and sisters, and a few hundred dollars However, after a number of years in Australia their desire o t assist their family and relatives in Viet Nam wanes substantially . After five years or so in Australia , and if they are able to obtain and maintain employment, Vietnamese-Australians may decide to b u y a new car , then an apartment or a house. Their repayment and mortgage commitments o t these material possessions , and possibly more children , o t dictate that they cannot continue to send thousands of dollars each year relatives in Viet Nam . The financial commitment to extended family members will become a non-commitment , and they will probably send less money to their is be non-Vietnamese b y changing their names, Some actively try o t disassociating themselves from the Vietnamese community and , in some cases , having cosmetic surgery. immediate family in Viet Nam. Changing economic and family situations in Australia weakens contacts between relatives , whether the relatives be in Australia , Viet Nam or elsewhere. The younger generation in particular comes to see the extended family, and possibly even parents still in Viet Nam , as a drain on their own resources. The desirability of maintaining extended family contacts essentially evaporates, and contact with parents and siblings in Viet Nam is substantially reduced. This not only exists in the relationship between Vietnamese in Australia and their relatives in Viet Nam , but also between Vietnamese with relatives , including siblings, in Australia . As a generalisation the frequency of contact between extended, and sometimes nuclear , family members decreases substantially over time , as individuals become more concerned with their individual position or their individual nuclear family. Changing expectations are also influenced b y adverse experiences, where domes bic violence , interfering parents ( or parents-in-law ) and marital infidelity are important, though not the sole considerations. Occurrences of domestic violence , interfering parents-in-law and marital infidelity exist in most societies , and they are not absent in Australian and Vietnamese society. However , while it may be argued that Vietnamese cultural norms and laws provide greater acceptance of these occurrences than Australian cultural norms , Australian laws, both in theory and practice , provide greater protection o t women than is the case in Viet Nam. At the same time , whereas interfering parents and parents-in-law are commonplace in Viet Nam , they have been a cause of marital disruption and dissolution in Vietnamese-Australian families if both partners hold divergent expectations of the roles of parents and parents -in-law in their marriages. An increasing number of Vietnamese-Australians are now deciding that their parents should remain in Viet Nam and not emigrate to Australia as they are concerned what their parents may disrupt their own successful marriage. Possibly this is one of the main reasons why 5 000 elderly Vietnamese have been abandoned b y their children in Australia. Observations also suggest that Vietnamese family units which emigrate intact , or almost totally intact , have a far greater chance of remaining 'close ' together after settlement than families where the members have emigrated at different times. I n the latter situation , family members are not only physically separated for extended periods of time , but also undergo different migration and resettlement experiences. This creates a situation where the reintegration of the family upon reunification is extremely difficult when family power and role relationships are being renegotiated. Finally , it may be argued that the 15 000 Vietnamese-Australian visiting Viet Nam each year is an example of the closeness of the Vietnamese family. However, o t find significant proportion of this group are single Vietnamese males seeking awife in Viet Nam , or Vietnamese-Australian businesspeople seeking investment opportunities in Viet Nam. Although the majority of these Vietnamese tourists go to see family and relatives , as well as the country, for the majority the trip is not the annual visit to see relatives . Although some Vietnamese-Australians return to Viet Nam each year to see relatives , f o r the majority the may return once or twice decade , if at all. These people see their f u t u r e in Australia , not in Viet Nam , and the trip o t visit relatives in Viet Nam is perceived more of a burden than a pleasure. 19 At this stage some members of the Vietnamese diaspora start complaining that their families always ask for money , and are unwilling to help themselves. Some Vietnamese diaspora almost break-off contact with their families in Viet Nam at this time as they believe that their families in Viet Nam consider them o t be a bottomless source of cash. 7. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS There is no such entity as the traditional Vietnamese family, except in the stereotypical generalisation of some authors and scholars. Through recorded Vietnamese history there have been a variety of notions of what conceptualises the Vietnamese family. These variations also exist between different social strata of society in various geographical locations within Viet Nam. The stereotypical traditional large extended Vietnamese family is a concept propagated b y a maledominated Confucian literati who controlled Vietnamese literature and scholarship for most of recorded history . U p until the early twentieth century the Vietnamese household may be perceived as often being comprised of 2-3 generations of possibly several nuclear families in one dwelling , while maintaining a close relationship with extended family members. However, social disruption due to modern warfare , Western cultural penetration and urbanisation have changed the nature and f u n ctioning of the Vietnamese family. Recent research in Viet Nam over the past decade b y Professor Le Thi Nham Tuvet and Dr Le Thi Q u y have confirmed the existence of these ongoing changes. Homelessness and children abandoning their parents appear to be as prevalent in contemporary Viet Nam as they are within the Vietnamese diaspora in Australia. Unfortunately many commentators on the social conditions of Vietnamese in the diaspora are unaware of recent social trends within Viet Nam , and thus the relationship between the evolution of Vietnamese society and changes within the Vietnamese diaspora are ignored. When discussing changes in the Vietnamese-Australian conceptualisation of the family it is most important to be aware that the Vietnamese conceptualisation of the family in Viet Nam is also changing over time , though Western scholars have Vietnamese little information on the situation in contemporary Viet Nam. conceptualisations of the family are changing, whether in the diaspora or in Viet Nam. While younger members of the Vietnamese diaspora are rapidly adopting Western cultural behaviour and norms , including notions of the family , young Vietnamese in Viet Nam are also changing, and will probably do so more rapidly now that the American trade embargo was lifted in early February 1994. The major weakness of this paper is that is primarily based on the personal observations, and at times involvement, of the first author. Close friendships formed over the past two decades with many Vietnamese-Australians generally still remain , thus permitting observations and participation in family dynamics. Although it was tempting to select specific cases and consider changes within these families since their arrival in Australia, it was decided that it was best at this time to provide a general overview of our observations, and in a later paper The information we provide a more detailed discussion of individual cases. presented above is a general overview from the cases we know. Over time the Vietnamese family in Australia is becoming more like the Australian family: it is increasingly becoming a two-generation nuclear family , and the proportion of single-parent families is also increasing. The family is also not as close as in the past, especially as new technology invades the home and the demands of contemporary life provides fewer opportunities for extended family members to physically interact. The demands of parenthood , the lack of traditional child care facilities ( in the form of elder siblings or parents ) and the time 20 These two Ha Not-based researchers have produced b y f a r the most important sociological research on the family and women in contemporary Viet Nam . It is unfortunate that relatively little of their research has been made available and disseminated in English. required to maintain a household have also acted to reduce the amount of time that relatives can spend together. 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