Social welfare services provided for marriage immigrants in Taiwan are commonly explored from the vulnerable population perspective. The problematic nature of stigma and labeling against marriage immigrants in Taiwanese society seems to be ignored. The basic thematic focus of this paper will center marriage immigrants on the tension between human rights and cultures. We would like to understand when marriage immigrants come to the discussion, how we will bring up terms ‘culture’ and ‘rights’ as an empirical matter such as discrimination, exploitation, social stigma and so on. By doing so, we expect to embrace human rights issues that concern issues such as social justice, equity, freedom, tolerance, and social change.