This business of kidnapping: Making sense of kidnapping within a business transaction perspective
College
Br. Andrew Gonzalez FSC College of Education
Department/Unit
Counseling and Educational Psychology
Document Type
Article
Source Title
Philippine Journal of Psychology
Volume
37
Issue
1
First Page
141
Last Page
159
Publication Date
2004
Abstract
This paper looked into the personal accounts of Chinese-Filipino kidnap-for-ransom victims in Manila. It sought to (a) explore the experience of kidnapping from the point of view of the victims, and (b) discover and make sense of the common features in their experiences. Five respondents were interviewed. The environmental, cognitive and behavioral conditions of the kidnapping ordeal were outlined. The Business Transaction Perspective was then used to structure this information. Similarities were found between kidnapping and a business transaction in that they were both (a) about money, (b) not personal, (c) share similar roles, (d) were governed by similar rules, and (e) temporary. Implications of these similarities were then outlined. This perspective only takes into account the stories included in this research. However, it still offers a fresh way for us to make sense of a phenomenon we know so little about.
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Recommended Citation
Mateo, N. C. (2004). This business of kidnapping: Making sense of kidnapping within a business transaction perspective. Philippine Journal of Psychology, 37 (1), 141-159. Retrieved from https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/12249
Disciplines
Psychology
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