Title <Book Reviews>Lisandro E. Claudio. Taming People's Power: the EDSA Revolutions and Their Contradictions. Quezon City
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Researchonline@JCU
ResearchOnline@JCU This is the Published Version of a paper published in the journal Pacific Journalism Review: Forbes, Amy (2015) Courageous women in media: Marcos and censorship in the Philippines. Pacific Journalism Review, 21 (1). pp. 195-210. http://www.pjreview.info/articles/courageous-women- media-marcos-and-censorship-philippines-1026 POLITICAL JOURNALISM IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC PHILIPPINES 14. Courageous women in media Marcos and censorship in the Philippines Abstract: When Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos declared Martial Law in 1972, press freedom became the first casualty in the country that once boasted of being the ‘freest in Asia’. Printing presses, newspaper offices, television and radio stations were raided and padlocked. Marcos was especially fearful of the press and ordered the arrest of journalists whom he charged with conspiring with the ‘Left’. Pressured into lifting martial law after nearly 10 years, Marcos continued to censor the media, often de- manding publishers to sack journalists whose writing he disapproved of. Ironically, he used the same ‘subversive writings’ as proof to Western observers that freedom of the press was alive and well under his dictatorship. This article looks at the writings of three female journalists from the Bulletin Today. The author examines the work of Arlene Babst, Ninez Cacho-Olivares, and Melinda de Jesus and how they traversed the dictator’s fickle, sometimes volatile, reception of their writing. Interviewed is Ninez Cacho-Olivare, who used humour and fairy tales in her popular column to criticise Marcos, his wife, Imelda, and even the military that would occasionally ‘invite’ her for questioning. She explains an unwritten code of conduct between Marcos and female journalists that served to shield them from total political repression. -
THE HUMBLE BEGINNINGS of the INQUIRER LIFESTYLE SERIES: FITNESS FASHION with SAMSUNG July 9, 2014 FASHION SHOW]
1 The Humble Beginnings of “Inquirer Lifestyle Series: Fitness and Fashion with Samsung Show” Contents Presidents of the Republic of the Philippines ................................................................ 8 Vice-Presidents of the Republic of the Philippines ....................................................... 9 Popes .................................................................................................................................. 9 Board Members .............................................................................................................. 15 Inquirer Fitness and Fashion Board ........................................................................... 15 July 1, 2013 - present ............................................................................................... 15 Philippine Daily Inquirer Executives .......................................................................... 16 Fitness.Fashion Show Project Directors ..................................................................... 16 Metro Manila Council................................................................................................. 16 June 30, 2010 to June 30, 2016 .............................................................................. 16 June 30, 2013 to present ........................................................................................ 17 Days to Remember (January 1, AD 1 to June 30, 2013) ........................................... 17 The Philippines under Spain ...................................................................................... -
Urban Fragmentation and Class Contention in Metro Manila
Urban Fragmentation and Class Contention in Metro Manila by Marco Z. Garrido A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Sociology) in the University of Michigan 2013 Doctoral Committee: Professor Jeffery M. Paige, Chair Dean Filomeno V. Aguilar, Jr., Ateneo de Manila University Associate Professor Allen D. Hicken Professor Howard A. Kimeldorf Associate Professor Frederick F. Wherry, Columbia University Associate Professor Gavin M. Shatkin, Northeastern University © Marco Z. Garrido 2013 To MMATCG ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I thank my informants in the slums and gated subdivisions of Metro Manila for taking the time to tell me about their lives. I have written this dissertation in honor of their experiences. They may disagree with my analysis, but I pray they accept the fidelity of my descriptions. I thank my committee—Jeff Paige, Howard Kimeldorf, Gavin Shatkin, Fred Wherry, Jun Aguilar, and Allen Hicken—for their help in navigating the dark woods of my dissertation. They served as guiding lights throughout. In gratitude, I vow to emulate their dedication to me with respect to my own students. I thank Nene, the Cayton family, and Tito Jun Santillana for their help with my fieldwork; Cynch Bautista for rounding up an academic audience to suffer through a presentation of my early ideas, Michael Pinches for his valuable comments on my prospectus, and Jing Karaos for allowing me to affiliate with the Institute on Church and Social Issues. I am in their debt. Thanks too to Austin Kozlowski, Sahana Rajan, and the Spatial and Numeric Data Library at the University of Michigan for helping me make my maps. -
The Philippines
WORKING PAPERS OF THE JOHNS HOPKINS COMPARATIVE NONPROFIT SECTOR PROJECT Lester M. Salamon Director Defining the Nonprofit Sector: The Philippines Ledivina V. Cariño and the PNSP Project Staff 2001 Ugnayan ng Pahinungod (Oblation Corps) University of the Philippines Suggested form of citation: Cariño, Ledivina V. and the PNSP Project Staff. “Volunteering in Cross-National Perspective: Evidence From 24 Countries.” Working Papers of the Johns Hopkins Comparative Nonprofit Sector Project, no. 39. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Center for Civil Society Studies, 2001. ISBN 1-886333-46-7 © The Johns Hopkins University Center for Civil Society Studies, 2001 All rights reserved Center for Civil Society Studies Institute for Policy Studies The Johns Hopkins University 3400 N. Charles Street Baltimore, Maryland 21218-2688 USA Institute for Policy Studies Wyman Park Building / 3400 North Charles Street / Baltimore, MD 21218-2688 410-516-7174 / FAX 410-516-8233 / E-mail: [email protected] Center for Civil Society Studies Preface This is one in a series of working papers produced under the Johns Hopkins Comparative Nonprofit Sector Project (CNP), a collaborative effort by scholars around the world to understand the scope, structure, and role of the nonprofit sector using a common framework and approach. Begun in 1989 in 13 countries, the Project continues to expand, currently encompassing about 40 countries. The working papers provide a vehicle for the initial dissemination of the work of the Project to an international audience of scholars, practitioners and policy analysts interested in the social and economic role played by nonprofit organizations in different countries, and in the comparative analysis of these important, but often neglected, institutions. -
A Study on the Images of the Virgin Mary Clad in a Local Dress in the Philippines
88 Panel 3 Image and Identity: A Study on the Images of the Virgin Mary Clad in a Local Dress in the Philippines Yuria Furusawa Introduction The study was carried out using three methods: library research of literature on related themes, This art historical and iconographical study on and of historical or contemporary documents on the images of the Virgin Mary dressed in a local religious art and the images of Mary; observation or ethnic dress in the Philippines forms part of and documentation of art works and religious a comparative study on the images of Mary in Asia. images in museums and churches; and interviews It explores the multilayered culture and identities of individuals such as artists, researchers, religious of individuals and societies in the Philippines leaders, and devotees. These interviews were through the creation and the meaning of such conducted in English, which is widely spoken in images found in modern and contemporary art, the country. and in popular religious images in the 20th to the 21st centuries. The objects of the research were images of Mary among Christian lowlanders of the Philippines, Studying images of Mary in an Asian dress could including art works housed in museums, and help us understand “changing identities and their devotional images enshrined in churches. social, historical and cultural contexts”, which is the API theme for the year 2011-2012, because a Backgrounds dress shows the wearer’s identity, and the traditional or national costume especially represents the First of all, who is Mary? The mother of Jesus Christ, tradition and uniqueness of a culture or a country. -
Persistent Resistance: Libraries in the Philippines and Their Fight for Freedom and People's Rights
Submitted on: 01.06.2017 Persistent Resistance: Libraries in the Philippines and their Fight for Freedom and People’s Rights Iyra S. Buenrostro Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Nanyang Technological University, Singapore E-mail address: [email protected] Johann Frederick A. Cabbab School of Library and Information Studies University of the Philippines Diliman, Philippines E-mail address: [email protected] Copyright © 2017 by Iyra S. Buenrostro and Johann Frederick A. Cabbab. This work is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 Abstract: In this paper, the stories of libraries that survived during and after the Martial Law years in the Philippines under the late strongman President Ferdinand Marcos are concisely unravelled. The authors focus on the three key institutions that have played important roles in the preservation and documentation of the events and effects of the dictatorial government to the people. These are the University of the Philippines Diliman Library or UP Main Library, Task Force Detainees of the Philippines, and Bantayog ng mga Bayani or Monument to the Heroes. The experiences of these institutions have illustrated the changing raison d'etre of libraries and librarians in the Philippines. The paradigm has shifted from mere gathering of materials to a more forward-looking activism. Keywords: Philippine libraries, Martial Law, Ferdinand Marcos, human rights, social justice Introduction The story of libraries mirrors the story of society – the authority exercised by the ruling power as well as the countless struggles of people. -
SANCHEZ Final Defense Draft May 8
LET THE PEOPLE SPEAK: SOLIDARITY CULTURE AND THE MAKING OF A TRANSNATIONAL OPPOSITION TO THE MARCOS DICTATORSHIP, 1972-1986 BY MARK JOHN SANCHEZ DISSERTATION Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History with a minor in Asian American Studies in the Graduate College of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2018 Urbana, Illinois Doctoral Committee: Associate Professor Augusto Espiritu, Chair Professor Antoinette Burton Associate Professor Jose Bernard Capino Professor Kristin Hoganson Abstract This dissertation attempts to understand pro-democratic activism in ways that do not solely revolve around public protest. In the case of anti-authoritarian mobilizations in the Philippines, the conversation is often dominated by the EDSA "People Power" protests of 1986. This project discusses the longer histories of protest that made such a remarkable mobilization possible. A focus on these often-sidelined histories allows a focus on unacknowledged labor within social movement building, the confrontation between transnational and local impulses in political organizing, and also the democratic dreams that some groups dared to pursue when it was most dangerous to do so. Overall, this project is a history of the transnational opposition to the Marcos dictatorship in the Philippines. It specifically examines the interactions among Asian American, European solidarity, and Filipino grassroots activists. I argue that these collaborations, which had grassroots activists and political detainees at their center, produced a movement culture that guided how participating activists approached their engagements with international institutions. Anti-Marcos activists understood that their material realities necessitated an engagement with institutions more known to them for their colonial and Cold War legacies such as the press, education, human rights, international law, and religion. -
Eyewitness Accounts of Martial Law Victims and Survivors
The University Library Office of the Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs University of the Philippines Los Baños Journal Articles May 2021 Stories of the nameless : eyewitness accounts of Martial Law victims and survivors Gloria E. Melencio University of the Philippines Los Baños Recommended Citation Melencio, Gloria E., "Stories of the nameless : eyewitness accounts of Martial Law victims and survivors" (2021). Journal Articles. 3954. https://www.ukdr.uplb.edu.ph/journal-articles/3954 UK DR University Knowledge Digital Repository For more information, please contact [email protected] UP LOS BAÑOS JOURNAL Stories of the Nameless: Eyewitness Accounts of Martial Law Victims and Survivors Volume XVII January-December 2019 STORIES OF THE NAMELESS: EYEWITNESS ACCOUNTS OF MARTIAL LAW VICTIMS AND SURVIVORS Gloria Esguerra Melencio Department of Social Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences, University of the Philippines Los Baños, College, Laguna E-mail: [email protected] (Corresponding author) Received 05 October 2018 Accepted for publication 12 September 2019 Abstract This paper features the eyewitness accounts of some 10 victims of martial law in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. Most of the eyewitnesses belong to the lower strata of the Philippine social structure. They are the nameless victims of a cruelty inflicted on a society that is interested mainly on the stories of the rich and famous, the good and the beautiful. Recorded history has always delineated the “inarticulate” (Constantino, 1975) to the background and denied them a space in the pages of history. This document aims to shine the spotlight on the “ugly” reality: stories of courage, strength, and the will to live with dignity during the martial law period. -
60 Diliman Gender Review 2019 61
60 Diliman Gender Review 2019 61 ANG KASAYSAYAN NG MAKABAYANG KILUSAN NG BAGONG KABABAIHAN (MAKIBAKA), 1970-2016* Pauline Mari Hernando, Ph.D. ABSTRAK Nabuo ang Makabayang Kilusan ng Bagong Kababaihan o MAKIBAKA, isang rebolusyonaryong kilusan ng kababaihan sa Pilipinas, sa panahon ng tinaguriang Sigwa ng Unang Kwarto noong Dekada 70. Binabaybay sa saliksik na ito ang mga makabuluhang tala sa pag-iral ng organisasyon sa kontekstong politikal, historikal, at ekonomiko ng lipunang Pilipino sa loob ng halos limang dekada. Kasabay na tinatalakay ang mga salik sa pag-ugit ng militansya at militarismo at iba pang integral na pangyayari sa panahon ng Unang Sigwa kung saan partikular na namayani ang mga kilusang panlipunan sa Pilipinas mula sa iba’t ibang sektor. Narito ang mga tala at paglilinaw sa naging simulain ng MAKIBAKA mula sa paglulunsad at piket sa Bb. Pilipinas, pagtatatag ng mga himpilan sa Maynila, pagharap sa mga hamong internal, pagsuong sa mga panimulang gawain at usaping pang-estruktura, pagtugon sa krisis sa kasapian, pagkatuto sa mga himpilan, at paghawan ng daan tungo sa lehitimasyon ng linyang pampolitika bilang makapangyarihang kilusang pagpapalaya sa kababaihan sa bansa. Sentral na bahagi ng papel na ito ang transpormasyon *Batay sa disertasyon ng may-akda na pinamagatang “Ang Rebolusyonarya sa Panitikan at Kasaysayan ng Makabayang Kilusan ng Bagong Kababaihan (MAKIBAKA), 1970-2016” (2017). Ang pananaliksik na ito ay sinuportahan ng Office of the Vice- Chancellor for Research and Development sa pamamagitan ng Ph.D. Incentive Awards. 62 Diliman Gender Review 2019 ng MAKIBAKA mula sa pagiging hayag tungo sa pagiging lihim na kilusan. Itinatampok ito ng mga programa at pagbabagong dulot sa kanilang Una hanggang Ikaapat na Pambansang Kongreso. -
Download RIPH
UNIT 4: Social, Political, Economic and Cultural Issues in Philippine History IV. Topic: Social, political, economic and cultural issues in Philippine history: Mandated topics: 1. Land and Agrarian Reform Policies 2. The Philippine Constitutions of 1899, 1935, 1973 and 1987 3. Taxation Additional topics: Filipino Cultural heritage; Filipino-American relations; Government peace treaties with the Muslim Filipinos; Institutional history of schools, corporations, industries, religious groups and the like; Biography of a prominent Filipino Learning Outcomes: Effectively communicate, using various techniques and genres, their historical analysis of a particular event or issue that could help other people understand the chosen topic; Propose recommendations or solutions to present day problems based on their own understanding of their root causes, and their anticipation of future scenarios; Display the ability to work in a multi-disciplinary team and can contribute to a group endeavor; Methodology: Lecture/Discussion; Library and Archival research; Document analysis Group reporting; Documentary Film Showing Readings: 4.1. Land and Agrarian Reform: Primary Sources: a. the American period and Quezon administration : "The Philippine Rice Share Tenancy Act of 1933 (Act 4054) http://www.chanrobles.com/acts/actsno4054.html b. the Magsaysay administration: "Agricultural Tenancy Act of the Philippines of 1954 (R.A. 1199) http://www.lawphil.net/statutes/repacts/ra1954/ra_1199_1954.html c. the Macapagal administration : Agricultural Land Reform Code of 1963 (R.A 3844) http://www.lawphil.net/statutes/repacts/ra1963/ra_3844_1963.html d. the Marcos regime and under Martial Law P.D. 27 of 1972 http://www.lawphil.net/statutes/presdecs/pd1972/pd_27_1972.html e. the Cory Aquino administration Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program of 1988 (R.A. -
Information Kit As of May 2016 Greenfield District
www.PreSelling.com.ph Information Kit As of May 2016 Greenfield District GREENFIELD DISTRICT was carefully designed to become an ideal city that would lie at the heart of the metropolis, providing people high-tech conveniences combined with natural wonders, and a true break from the chaos and congestion. At Greenfield District, people who live, work and shop here will have the opportunity to be fully "connected.“ SMART AND CONNECTED CONVENIENCE Thanks to careful city-planning and reliable state-of- the-art fiber-optic and wireless technology, everything runs smoothly in Greenfield District. You're connected to the city outside and the rest of the world with high-tech facilities and sufficient Wi-Fi zones. SHADED SKYWAYS Interconnected skyways and parking areas connect BREATHTAKING VIEWS www.PreSelling.com.phbuildings in Greenfield District, making it easy and A generous portion of Greenfield District is dedicated comfortable to get from one place to another. to open spaces like parks and lush gardens, giving you more breathtaking views and a greater sense of well- being. Greenfield District AN IDEAL NEIGHBORHOOD WITH A A PARK OF WONDERS FOR CHILDREN COURTYARD One of the main attractions of the district is the Greenfield District's neighborhood cluster is made Children's Park. A green playground divided into up of high-rise and mid-rise residential towers and several sections by rolling hills, trees and plants, there a two-storey structure for shops. Connecting all will be picnic lawns, delightful fountains and a space these is a courtyard with a landscaped garden, for sandwich and hotdog booths. -
Narrating Human Rights in the Philippines: Collective Memories of the Filipino Youth on the Marcos Regime
7 Journal of Southeast Asian Human Rights, Vol. 3 No. 1 June 2019 pp. 7-38 doi: 10.19184/jseahr.v3i1.8411 © University of Jember & Indonesian Consortium for Human Rights Lecturers Narrating Human Rights in the Philippines: Collective Memories of the Filipino Youth on the Marcos Regime Ma. Rhea Gretchen A. Abuso Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Xavier University Email: [email protected] Abstract The 2016 national elections in the Philippines have been regarded as the most revealing and consequential democratic practice to the human rights situation in the country for two reasons. First, the overwhelming election of Rodrigo Duterte to the presidency was because of his campaign promise to rid the country of drugs and criminality within “3 to 6 months” through bloody and violent means. Second, the son and namesake of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, whose authoritarian regime in the 1970’s was responsible for countless human rights violations, narrowly lost his vice-presidential bid by a mere 270,000 votes. These turns of events beg the question: how could Filipinos, who experienced a bloody and violent regime at the hands of a dictator, choose to elect national leaders widely associated with human rights violations? This paper addresses this question through the use of in-depth interviews with Filipino college students in key cities in the Philippines in order to describe the Marcos regime from the perspective of the generation that did not experience the period. The research aimed to understand how memories of past human rights violations are formed and shaped, how these memories are crucial to the improvement of the human rights situation in society, and how to ensure that mistakes of the past are not repeated.