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Contents
- Abstract
- Conceptualizing CM Among Filipino Americans
- Some Potential Psychological Correlates of CM
- CM and Collective Self-Esteem (CSE)
- CM and Acculturation
- Additional Hypotheses
- Method
- Participants
- Measures
- Colonial Mentality Scale-Initial (CMS-I)
- Collective Self-Esteem Scale (CSES; Luhtanen & Crocker, 1992 )
- Vancouver Index of Acculturation (VIA; Ryder, Alden, & Paulhus, 2000 )
- Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (RSES; Rosenberg, 1965 )
- Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D; Radloff, 1977 )
- Exposure vignettes
- Schedule of Racist Events (SRE; Landrine & Klonoff, 1996 )
- Procedure
- Data Splitting for Cross-Validation
- Results
- Subsample 1: Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA) and Initial Reliability and Validity Estimates
- Internal consistency
- Concurrent and discriminant validity
- Subsample 2: Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA), Reliability, and Validity Estimates
- Internal consistency
- Concurrent and discriminant validity
- Is CM Passed on Through Generations by Socialization (Exposure) and Continued Oppression?
- How Common Is CM Among Modern Day Filipino Americans?
- Does CM Play a Role in Filipino American Mental Health?
- Discussion
- Validity of the CMS for Filipino Americans
- Clinical Implications
- Limitations
- Summary and Conclusions
Figures and Tables
Abstract
Colonial mentality, or internalized colonialism, has been discussed by scholars and by Filipino American community members as a significant factor in the experiences of contemporary Filipino Americans, yet this construct has not received empirical attention in psychology. The authors of the current study addressed this gap in the Asian American psychological literature by developing the Colonial Mentality Scale for Filipino Americans, a theoretically derived and psychometrically tested multidimensional measure of colonial mentality. Exploratory (n = 292) and confirmatory (n = 311) factor analyses on Internet-obtained data suggest that colonial mentality among Filipino Americans is best conceptualized and measured as composed of 5 related factors, each of which represents unique manifestations of the construct. Results also suggest that colonial mentality is associated with the psychological well-being and mental health of modern day Filipino Americans. Research and clinical implications are discussed.
Filipinos have a unique historical relationship with the United States, as they were some of the earliest Asian immigrants to the country (going back as early as the 1700s; Cordova, 1983), the Philippines was the only U.S. colony in Asia until 1946, and U.S. military bases were maintained...





