000 02823nam a22002297a 4500
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040 _cUPMin
090 _aLG 993.5 2022 A6
_bL86
100 _aLumayag, Nhikki Pauline B.
_eauthor
_923209
245 _aComeback of cashless communities :
_ban ethnographic study of online barter as a strategic response to economic difficulties during the COVID-19 pandemic /
_cNhikki Pauline B. Lumayag
260 _c2022
300 _a67 leaves
502 _bThesis (BS Anthropology) --
_cUniversity of the Philippines Mindanao,
_dJuly 2022
520 3 _aThis research study examines how members of the (Official) Cotabato Online Barter Community (OCBC) utilize online barter activities to strategically cope with economic difficulties during the COVID-19 pandemic. For the purpose of the study, active members, inactive members who were able to participate in barter activities, and the group administrator and moderators were included as research participants. It is guided by the principles of ethnography and the data collection strategies included online interviews, online surveys, and online participant and non-participant observation. The findings of the study generated from the informants’ responses reveal that members of the OCBC utilize online barter to acquire basic necessities due to lack of monetary means resulting from the repercussions of the ecological disasters and stringent health protocols and hard lockdowns imposed as pandemic containment strategies, to dispose of underutilized goods, and to help and be able to ask for help from other barter members. Secondly, members facilitate barter exchanges by scrutinizing their relationship with their barter partners and their partners’ Facebook profiles. A significant number of informants explained that they are not selective with their barter partners due to excessive competition within the group and abiding by specific rules and norms in the exchange process. Findings also reveal that participants interpret online barter based on how they utilize such practice and based on the traditional definition provided by scholars. Lastly, as evidenced by their responses, informants explained that they experience the online barter community as an actual community where barter transactions either fail or succeed. As a contribution to the literature on online barter, this study has attempted to explore the dynamics and mechanisms of an online barter community, demonstrate the conditions that fueled the prominence of online barter as an emerging phenomenon, and contextualize its origin.
658 _aUndergraduate thesis
_cANTH 200b
700 _aTandog, Thea Kersti C.
_eadviser
_923210
905 _aUP
905 _aFi
942 _2lcc
_cTHESIS
_n0
999 _c20131
_d20131