Conflict Studies Quarterly The Philippines: The Challenges of Moro and Lumad Power-sharing in the Bangsamoro Jose Mikhail PEREZ Abstract: Two self-ascribed ethnic groups—Moro and Lumad—are native to Mindanao in the southern Philippines. Both groups share a common history of oppression from Western colonial- ism, Christian resettlement, and capitalist interests where the former has waged a more organized insurgency against the Philippine government in the late twentieth century. Due to the political superiority of the Moros, the Lumads are often left marginalized in the various peace processes in Mindanao due to their accommodation to the Moro’s call for the creation of anautonomous region under an internal power-sharing agreement. This form of double marginalization against the Lumad promotes a sense of internal colonialism where such arrangements are only left between the Bangsamoro regional government and the Philippine national government, thereby forcing the latter to accommodate to Moro interests. Analyzing the text of the recent peace agreements between the Republic of the Philippines and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (GRP-MILF), Moros and Lumads under power-sharing and power-dividing measures. The article concludes that consociationalismin ethnicallythe article dividedattempts societies to understand often lead the to conflict more ethnicdynamics cleavages between if done haphazardly to favor certain interests while leaving ethnic minorities at a disadvantage. Keywords: Moro, Lumad, Mindanao, Bangsamoro, consociationalism, identity politics. Jose Mikhail PEREZ Introduction Department of Political Science, University of the Philippines Diliman, In the longue durée, the people of Mindanao Philippines in the southern Philippines have suffered E-mail:
[email protected] past three decades.