|
The Industry
An American man seeking a
foreign bride may avail himself of over 200 different services
in which foreign women advertise for husbands. There are two
types of such services. In one type, the so-called
"mail-order bride" industry (representatives of the
industry prefer the term "international correspondence
service"), women's names, photos, biographical sketches,
and addresses are presented in hard copy brochures or on the
Internet. In these services, the agency provides the photos and
descriptions of the women, who are not charged for this listing.
Men who wish to obtain the mailing address of any of the women
they would like to contact are charged a fee of from $2 to $5
for each of the mailing addresses.
The other way to contact
potential spouses is through e-mail "pen-pal" clubs.
These services are generally free of charge. In them, men and
women provide biographical data, an e-mail address, and an
indication of what type of relationship they seek. Some of the
larger, more established of these pen-pal clubs are One-And-Only.com,
Friendfinder.com, Match.com, Kiss.com, and Date.com. In these
clubs, one can find nearly 10,000 foreign women seeking marriage
or long-term relationships. Since these services require access
to computers, the women tend to be older and better educated
than those listed in the "mail-order bride" catalogs
and to reside in more developed countries such as Japan and
Russia.
The women are obtained through
advertisements in local newspapers and popular women's magazines
and, most commonly, through word of mouth.
Based on a scanning of the
services listed and information provided by the agencies
themselves, we may estimate that between 100,000 and 150,000
women from a variety of countries (including the United States,
Canada, Europe, and Australia) annually advertise themselves as
available for marriage. The great majority of these women are
from two major areas: Southeast Asia, including the Philippines,
and Russia and other countries of the former Soviet Union.
The Philippines provides a large
number of the Asian listings, despite the fact that
"mail-order bride" activities have been illegal there
since 1986, while Thailand, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Korea,
and Japan are also seen often as the woman's native country.
In recent years, a large
increase in listings has been due to the influx of services
focused on women of Russia and the former Soviet Union. Nearly
half (69) of the 153 services listed in one source feature such
women. In addition to Russia itself, the Ukraine is the most
common country of origin.
The agencies vary considerably
in the number of women listed, the geographical origin of the
women, and in the length of time they have been in business. One
of the largest and oldest of them is Cherry Blossoms, which has
been operating since 1974 and lists over 6,000 women at any one
time. This company's listings reflect the general pattern of
national origin of the women seeking husbands: of the 6,000,
over 4,600 are from Asia (3,050 from the Philippines), 1,700
from the former Soviet Union (mostly from Russia and Ukraine),
and others from Latin and South America and Europe.
These businesses can be highly
profitable. Bob Burrows, president of Cherry Blossoms, reports
that his agency serves over 1,000 men per month who pay up to
$200 each.
The growth of these services has
been phenomenal. Glodava and Onizuka (1994) report that there
were 100 such companies in existence at the time of their
writing. In mid-March of 1998, when work on this present report
began, there were 153 listings in goodwife.com and in early May,
less than two months later, there were 202. This list of links
breaks down the agencies into four sections--Asian, Latin,
Multi-ethnic, and Soviet--based on where most of the women
currently reside. As can be seen in the table below, the current
rapid growth is due largely to agencies representing women from
Russia and the former Soviet Union.
|
|
March, 1998
|
May, 1998
|
|
Asian
|
38
|
55
|
|
Latin
|
20
|
24
|
|
Multi-ethni
|
26
|
28
|
|
Soviet
|
69
|
105
|
|
Total
|
153
|
202
|
The Women
An analysis of the listings in
recent issues of five popular catalogs featuring 1,400 Asian
women found that 70 percent were Filipino (despite the fact that
Republic Act No. 6955 makes such listings illegal), many of
whom are "in-service" as domestic workers in other
countries, 16 percent Indonesian, 8 percent Thai, 2 percent
Malaysian and Japanese, and 1 percent Chinese and Korean. In
terms of age, 20 percent are 16-20 years of age, 41 percent are
21-25, 24 percent are 26-30, 11 percent 31-35, and just 4
percent are over the age of 35. That is, for the Asian women, 61
percent are under the age of 25. There is a large difference in
ages between these Asian women and their counterparts from the
former Soviet Union. For the 1,700 Soviet women listed currently
by Cherry Blossoms, just 8 percent are under 20, 23 percent
between 21 and 25, 25 percent between 26 and 30, 20 percent from
31 to 35, 14 percent from 36 to 40, 7 percent aged 41 to 45, and
3 percent over 45. That is, just 31 percent are under 25
compared to the 61 percent of Asian women.
Why do foreign women want American
husbands? Many sources suggest that these women are searching
for a "better life" in terms of socio-economic
factors--they do, for the most part, come from places in which
jobs and educational opportunities for women are scarce and
wages are low. However, when the women themselves are asked this
question, the answer generally indicates an attraction to
American men (they look like movie stars) and an aversion
to native men. Americans, they say, make good husbands while
Filipino (Thai/Indonesian/Russian/etc.) men do not. Americans
are thought to be faithful to their wives, while the native men
are cruel and run around with other women. True or not, this is
the perception.
The Men
David Jedlicka (1988, cited in
Glodava and Onizuka, 1994) surveyed 607 American men seeking
mail-order brides and received 206 responses. He found that the
men were generally white (94 percent); highly educated (50
percent with two or more years of college, 6 percent with M.D.'s
or Ph.D.'s, only five did not complete high school); politically
and ideologically conservative; and generally economically and
professionally successful (64 percent earned more than $20,000 a
year; 42 were in professional or managerial positions). Their
median age was 37. The men came from 44 states, with 22 percent
from California, and 84 percent lived in metropolitan areas.
Fifty-seven percent had been married at least once; most had
been divorced after an average of seven years of marriage, 35
percent had at least one child, and 75 percent wished to father
additional children. When asked about their religious
affiliations, 48 percent of the men identified themselves as
Protestant, 23 percent as Catholic, 15 percent as belonging to
other religions, and 14 percent as having no religious
affiliation.
Why do American men want foreign
wives? Most of the personal reports from American men who have
married women through these agencies talk about
"traditional values." That is, American women are
thought not content to be wives and mothers but seek personal
satisfaction through their own careers and interests, while the
foreign woman is happy to be the homemaker and asks for nothing
more than husband, home, and family. Again, true or not, this is
the perception.
Although Jedlicka states in his
conclusions that his research shows the men who choose the
mail-order methods for mate selection appear ". . . above
average . . . certainly in their communication skills," and
"exceptional in the sense that they are trying
cross-cultural marriage to improve their chances for loving and
enduring relationships," he cautions that such conclusions
are thin at best and such interpretations from these data are
not warranted. His experience and the observations of others
show that, contrary to responses in questionnaires, those who
have used the mail-order bride route to find a mate have control
in mind more than a loving, enduring relationship.
Of the 30 mail-order bride
couples Mila Glodava (Glodava and Onizuka, 1994) encountered
between 1986 and 1993, only two were close in age (4 -6 years
difference). In the other 28 there was a 20 to 50 year
difference in age. Older men, says Glodava, often want women
"they can mold" and therefore do not want those who
are too educated. "They would just become like any other
American woman," they said. She concludes that, "It is
apparent that power and control are critical for the men."
It is interesting to note that
the views above on native and foreign men and women are not
limited to the Occident--a similar attitude exists in Taiwan.
According to "Taiwan Moves to Boost Women's Marriage
Prospects" (The Associated Press, Aug. 30, 1996, by Annie
Huang), many Taiwanese men prefer brides from other Asian
countries because they feel Taiwanese women--who tend to be
better educated and more affluent--expect too much from their
husbands. Due to this attitude, Taiwan has imposed a limit on
the number of brides from certain countries that can enter
Taiwan each year--360 from Indonesia, 420 from Burma, and 1,080
from China. On the women's side, many of them are seeking
Western men since, they say, Taiwanese men want to marry only
hard-working obedient drudges while Taiwanese women have
discarded this traditional role and are seeking equality and
mutual respect in marriage.
Success Rates for International
Services
In a survey done for this report
we sent e-mails to 102 of the services and received replies from
28. We asked what percentage of their female clients married
U.S. men.
Few agencies kept any records of
engagements or marriages; some because they are too new for
their clients to have had time to marry, some because they have
no interest in following up on their listings. Of those that
provided estimates of marriages, the ones listing predominately
women from Russia and the former Soviet Union countries provided
the highest figures--10 percent to 40 percent. Those whose women
were largely from the Philippines and Asian countries gave lower
estimates--none to 5 percent. In most cases, these estimates
were for marriages to men from any country, not specifically the
United States.
The only agency that provided
firm statistics was Encounters International. This agency has
been in business since 1993 and presents 450 Russian women in
its current listing. They report 102 marriages to date between
Russian women and U.S. men and, in addition, keep records of
births, divorces, and locations of the couples. If it is assumed
that the agency's listings have remained relatively constant at
about 500 women each of the five years of its existence, then
102 of the 2,500 women, or approximately 4 percent, have found
and married American men.
According to a report from the
Commission on Filipinos Overseas (Paredes-Maceda, 1995)
mail-order brides constitute 10 percent of the marriages between
Filipinos and foreign nationals. Between 1989 and 1994, 95,000
Filipino men and women were engaged to be married to foreigners,
the great majority of whom met their partners through work or
personal introductions. Of the foreign men who married
Filipinos, 44 percent were U.S. citizens.
According to the women
themselves (in written replies to a 1996 questionnaire from the
author), approximately 10 percent of these women are
successful--they find and marry a man through the service. There
are, then, around 10,000 marriages a year between women listed
by these agencies and men who use the services. Of these 10,000,
around 4,000 involve U.S. men. The remainder is distributed
among Canadian, Australian, European, and, increasingly,
Japanese clients.
Based on these data, we may
estimate that 4 percent of the 100,000 to 150,000 women seeking
U.S. husbands through international services find them; that is,
"mail-order bride" and e-mail correspondence services
result in 4,000 to 6,000 marriages between U.S. men and foreign
brides each year.
This figure, 4,000 to 6,000,
represents an increase from previous estimates (e.g., the
estimate of 2,000 to 3,500 given by Kadohata, 1990) due, no
doubt, to the recent increase in both e-mail correspondence
services and the agencies specializing in Russian and Ukrainian
women.
Impact on U.S. Marriages
According to data supplied by
the U.S. Census Bureau, there were 2,395,000 marriages in the
U.S. in the 12 months ending June, 1997 (and 1,154,000 divorces
in the same period). The 4,000 to 6,000 marriages involving
international services represent, then, a tiny portion (.021
percent) of the women who marry U.S. men.
It is interesting to note that,
based largely on data provided by the agencies themselves (along
with the Commission on Filipinos Overseas report cited above),
marriages arranged through these services would appear to have a
lower divorce rate than the nation as a whole, fully 80 percent
of these marriages having lasted over the years for which
reports are available.
Impact on U.S. Immigration
Statistics provided by the
Immigration and Naturalization Service for the years 1994-96
show that there have been over 800,000 immigrants per year, of
whom about 18 percent enter as spouses of U.S. citizens; e.g.,
169,760 of 915,900 in 1996. An additional 14 percent (130,000)
of the total immigrants involves parents and children of U.S.
citizens.
In any case, the 4,000 to 6,000
women who immigrate through international correspondence
agencies represent less than 6 percent of the new citizens. The
majority of the women who gain permanent resident alien status
through marriage do so through more traditional means, such as
by meeting their spouse at work or in school or through marriage
to U.S. servicemen stationed overseas.
Both U.S. citizens and permanent
resident aliens may petition for their spouses. While spouses
and minor children of citizens may enter without long waits once
the paperwork is approved, entry for spouses and minor children
of permanent resident aliens is regulated by annual ceilings. In
1996 about 54,000 spouses were sponsored by permanent resident
aliens.
Fraud
There is no question that many
of the alien women who advertise for U.S. husbands are far more
interested in gaining permanent residence alien status than in
gaining a good marriage. What portion of the women intend to use
marriage to gain permanent resident alien status cannot be
ascertained, of course, since we cannot know what is in the
woman's mind, but a reading of the self-descriptions they offer
and their willingness to marry men of advanced age and dubious
character attests to this intention. The true character of the
men is well expressed in Glodava and Onizuka (1994:26), who
note, "those who have used the mail-order bride route to
find a mate have control in mind rather than a loving and
enduring relationship."
The most common times for
mail-order brides to leave the marriage, according to Martin (n.d.)
are "immediately, 3 months after marriage (receipt of the
green card), and 2 years after marriage (receipt of
nonconditional permanent residence)."
There are reports of a different
kind of fraud--namely, one in which women are recruited into
prostitution through the international matchmaking services.
This new slave trade has not, however, to the author's
knowledge, occurred in the United States, although it is a well
documented trade involving Russian women imported into Israel
(Specter, 1998).
Abuse
According to "The Health
Care Response to Domestic Violence" (anon. 1994),
"Within the last year 7 percent of American women (3.9
million) who are married or are living with someone as a couple
were physically abused, and 37 percent (20.7 million) were
verbally or emotionally abused by their spouse or partner."
While no national figures exist
on abuse of alien wives, there is every reason to believe that
the incidence is higher in this population than for the nation
as a whole. Authorities agree that abuse in these marriages can
be expected based on the men's desire for a submissive wife and
the women's desire for a better life. At some point, after the
alien bride has had time to adjust to the new environment, to
make new friends, and to become comfortable with the language,
her new independence and his domination are bound to conflict.
The problem, according to Mila Glodava (Glodava and Onizuka,
1994) and Uma Narayan (Narayan, 1995), is largely due to the
men's unrealistic expectations. While many state a desire for a
submissive wife, they find that such dependence becomes a
burden. To provide some relief, the husband seeks ways (friends,
activities) that will get the wife "out of the house"
on occasion. The resulting independence then angers the husband
who manifests the anger on the wife, who may have only been
guilty of trying to please her husband.
Current INS Regulations
Immigration law concerning
marriage to foreign nationals contains numerous safeguards
discouraging abuse of this means of gaining U.S. permanent
residence alien status. In general, the couple must be serious
enough to wait for several months, to file a number of forms,
and to pay sizeable fees.
The procedures, as outlined by
the U.S. Department of State Bureau of Consular Affairs, are as
follows.
The Immigration and Nationality
Act, as amended, provides U.S. citizens with two options for
facilitating the immigration of future spouses to the United
States: the K-1 fiancé visa and the alien-spouse immigrant
visa. In many cases, the processing time for a fiancé visa is
shorter than that for an alien spouse. Fiancé(e) visa
processing can take several months from the filing of the
petition to the final adjudication of the visa. Total processing
time for the alien-spouse visa can take 6-12 months depending on
individual circumstances. While the immigrant visa route may
take longer, additional processing in the United States is not
required, as is the case for the fiancé(e) visa.
Marriage In the United States:
Fiancé(e) Visa
U. S. citizens may file an
I-129F petition with INS for the issuance of a K-1 fiancé(e)
visa to an alien fiancé(e). A citizen exercising this option
must remain unmarried until the arrival of the fiancé(e) in the
United States, and the wedding must take place within 3 months
of the fiancé(e)'s arrival if he/she is to remain in status.
Also, the alien and U.S. citizen must have met personally at
least once in the 2 years before the petition was filed. For
more information about K-1 visas see the Bureau of Consular
Affairs' brochure Tips For U. S. Visas: Fiancé(e)s.
Legal permanent residents may not file petitions for fiancé(e)
visas. They must marry abroad and then file an I-130
petition for the immigration of a new spouse.
Marriage Abroad: Alien Spouse
Visa
If a U.S. citizen marries an
alien abroad, an I-130 petition must be filed after the marriage
to begin the immigration process for the alien spouse. This can
be filed either with the Immigration and Naturalization Service
(INS) in the United States, or, under certain circumstances, at
U.S. Embassies or Consulates abroad. U. S. Embassies and
Consulates have differing policies on approving I-130s and
should be individually contacted about the availability of this
service. Many posts have their own web pages which include this
information and which can be accessed through the U.S. Embassy
and Consulate links page. Prior to departure from this country
the U.S. citizen should contact the INS or appropriate foreign
service post to ascertain exactly what documents will be
necessary to file the immigrant petition for a new spouse. For
more information about this option, see the Bureau of Consular
Affairs' brochure Tips for U.S. Visas: Family-Based
Immigrants. For more information on how to arrange a legally
valid marriage abroad, see the Office of Citizens' Consular
Services brochure Marriage of U.S. Citizens Abroad.
Procedurally, the process works
like this. The U.S. citizen or permanent resident must submit a
visa petition (form I-130) to appropriate local INS office to
prove that the marriage is bona fide, that is, entered
into for love rather than simply for the foreign-born spouse to
obtain a green card. Attached to the visa petition are the
following items: (1) Biographical forms (forms G-325A) for both
the husband and the wife with photos attached; (2) Proof of the
citizenship status of the petitioner. This can take the form of
a U.S. passport, a Certificate of Naturalization or Citizenship
or a certified copy of the citizen's birth certificate; (3) A
certified copy of the marriage certificate; (4) Certified copies
of the documents that terminated any previous marriages of the
husband or wife, including final divorce decrees, and
certificates of annulment or death; and, in the case of a
permanent resident alien, proof of such status. Simultaneously,
the foreign-born spouse must submit an application for
adjustment of status (form I-485) which is an application for a
green card. Items which must accompany the green card
application are a completed fingerprint chart and green card
photographs, and other INS forms may be required. The spouse can
also file an OF-230 with the consulate and be issued an
immigrant visa. In both the immigrant visa and adjustment of
status cases, the petitioning U.S. citizen or Legal Permanent
Resident must also complete an affidavit of support, INS form
I-864, on behalf of the alien spouse.
In the case of a mail-order
bride, a permanent resident alien would most likely marry the
person abroad and then file the I-130. It would be possible for
the woman to enter as a visitor or in another nonimmigrant
category so the marriage could occur in the United States. The
U.S. citizen spouse would then file the I-130 and the bride
would file for adjustment of status using INS form I-485.
Conditions
If the marriage is less than 2
years old when the foreign-born spouse becomes a permanent
resident, the green card will expire after a two-year period.
Both spouses must submit a joint petition (form I-751) to remove
the two-year condition within the 90-day period immediately
preceding the end of the two-year period. Upon removal of
conditions, a new green card is issued reflecting permanent
resident status.
If the marriage has terminated
by reason of divorce, death of the citizen spouse or spousal
abuse, the foreign-born spouse may apply for a waiver of the
joint petition requirement.
Recent Changes
Before 1986, when a citizen
married a foreigner and petitioned for the spouse, the spouse
was granted permanent residence fairly quickly and more or less
as a matter of course. In 1986, as a result of concerns about
alleged marriage fraud, Congress passed the Immigration Marriage
Fraud Amendments (IMFA), which changed the legal process.
Thereafter, the U.S. citizen had to petition for what is called
"conditional resident status" for the spouse. The
couple then had to wait for 2 years after conditional resident
status obtained during which time they had to remain married,
and then jointly petition INS to adjust the conditional
status to that of permanent residence. Both spouses had to
undergo a personal interview with the INS, to prove that the
marriage was a bona fide one, before permanent resident
status was conferred on the spouse (Anderson 1993). The two-year
waiting period to apply for permanent resident status required
by IMFA begins on the date the spouse obtains conditional
resident status. Administrative delays can continue for four
years or more.
In 1989, the House Judiciary
Committee on Immigration, Refugees and International Law held a
hearing on domestic violence in marriages between American
citizens and foreigners. Representative Louise M. Slaughter
testified that many battered conditional residents had no viable
legal options. She introduced a bill, passed in 1990, which
provided that battery and extreme cruelty, if alleged and
proven, could qualify a conditional resident for a waiver during
the waiting period. Initiation and termination of divorce
proceedings was not required, if abuse could be proven. This
legislation also terminated the condition that the divorce had
to be for a "good cause." It held that the termination
of a "good faith" marriage involving a conditional
resident could itself constitute a waiver, without regard to the
reasons for the divorce.
The petitioner, however, must
present other evidence to support the application for waiver
based on a claim of having been battered or subjected to extreme
cruelty. Evidence may include, but is not limited to, expert
testimony in the form of reports and affidavits from police,
judges, medical personnel, school officials and social service
agency personnel. The Service must be satisfied with the
credibility of the sources of documentation submitted in support
of the application.
Recommendations
Current INS rules and policies
seem well intentioned in that they allow U.S. citizens and
permanent residents to marry and bring to this country alien
spouses while providing some safeguards against abuse and fraud.
The existing problems that
appear to require some attention involve abuse. On the one hand,
the potential husbands might need to be screened. As Sumiko
Hennessy, executive director of the Asian Pacific Development
Center (anon., 1996), notes, "What you have are older men,
people with three divorces, alcohol problems . . .," some
of whom have a history of "domestic abuse or problems with
the law." To this end, I would strongly recommend that Uma
Narayan (Narayan, 1995) be consulted before any new legislation
focused on abuse and/or fraud is considered.
At the very least, alien spouses
should be informed of their rights and be given names,
addresses, and telephone numbers of agencies they may consult if
they face difficulties in the marriage, agencies such as: Legal
Aid for Abused Women and Children (703) 820-8393; AYUDA (202)
387-4848; National Coalition Against Trafficking in Women (814)
685-1447; NOW (707) 255-2516; and the Asian Pacific Development
Center (303) 220-3398.
"Whew, ok that's done, end
of part 2
Back to top
|