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Fiery encounters a spirituality of renewal for Christian workers among the urban poor /McCowan, Tim, January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Catholic Theological Union at Chicago, 2001. / Abstract and vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 162-191).
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Pagbabalik-Loob toward a dynamic relationship between the authentic self and others /Dangazo, Nolan V. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Catholic Theological Union at Chicago, 2004. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [54]-57).
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Magindanao, 1860-1888 the career of Dato Uto of Buayan.Ileto, Reynaldo Clemeña. January 1971 (has links)
Thesis (M. A.)--Cornell University, 1970. / Also available in print.
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Worship practice in the Churches of Christ, Central Luzon, PhilippinesWissmann, Cheryl January 2005 (has links)
Worship practice in Christian churches around the world has changed rapidly in the last two decades. The impact of contemporary Christian music on non-western churches has been little studied. The Filipino Churches of Christ of Central Luzon have utilized tools of a worship service order and a hymnbook provided by American missionaries in the early twentieth century to establish a consistent worship practice. As the new music has entered through international marketing and communication, the worship order has remained the same while the usage of the Tagalog himnario has declined. This research reviews Filipino history, the history of the Churches of Christ, missionary practice in the Filipino Churches of Christ, the translation of the himnario from the English, the impact of new Tagalog lyrics, and the importation of contemporary Christian music into the Churches of Christ.
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Två spanska kulturmöten : Spanjorers möte med azteker och ursprungsbefolkningar på Filippinerna / Two Spanish cultural meetings : Spain's meeting with Aztecs and indigenous peoples in the PhilippinesHesslind, Hazzel January 2018 (has links)
In this essay you will witness two different cultural exchanges that the Spaniards experienced in the 16th century, on one hand with the Aztec people from Mexico, and on the other hand with multiple peoples from the Philippines. The purpose of this essay is to find out how the Spaniards responded to facing these cultures for the very first time, and also to explore what the differences between these two exchanges were, and to find out why one led to the slaughter of so many human beings, and the other one did not. To find out why this is, I have examined their letters from the 16th century.
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Clinical and Epidemiologic Studies of Cleft Lip and Palate in the PhilippinesMurray, Jeffrey C., Daack-Hirsch, Sandra, Buetow, Kenneth H., Munger, Ronald, Espina, Lourdes, Paglinawan, Nena, Villanueva, Edith, Rary, John, Magee, Kathy, Magee, William 01 January 1997 (has links)
Clinical and epidemiologic studies of defined geographic populations can serve as a means of establishing data important for genetic counseling and as a first step in identifying strategies best suited for identification of causes. Under the sponsorship of Operation Smile International, clinical, genetic, and epidemiologic studies were carried out at six sites within the Philippines between 1989 and 1996. Patients who were being evaluated for surgical repair of craniofacial anomalies (primarily clefts of the lip and palate) were briefly examined for the presence of associated anomalies, and a family history was obtained to look for the frequency of cleft lip and palate in siblings. Birth records of 47,969 newborns born over an 8-year period at one hospital in Bacolod City in the province of Negros Occidental were reviewed. Medical records of infants born with clefts of the lip and/or palate and other major anomalies were reviewed and birth prevalence rates calculated. Findings include a birth prevalence of 1.94 per 1000 live births for cleft lip with/without palate in the Philippines. Recurrence rates in siblings for nonsyndromic clefts of the lip and palate were 23 per 1000 for cleft lip with or without cleft palate, and 14 per 1000 for cleft palate only. The percentage of clefts associated with multiple anomalies was 21% at birth and 6% for individuals examined during the screening process, providing evidence for a high postnatal death rate. These data provide groundwork for additional etiologic studies including segregation analysis and molecular genetic studies involving linkage or association, as well as for studies of environmental contributions to clefting such as vitamin deficiencies. Preliminary molecular analysis using an association approach is reported in a companion paper. The findings suggest a high incidence of cleft lip and palate in native-born Filipinos.
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Every Granddaughter Is GunitaRamos, Lauren Lourdes 01 May 2022 (has links)
Every Granddaughter is Gunita is a poetry collection of family memories distilled from the perspective of a young, Filipina granddaughter. Written in several narrative, lyric voices, the collection harks the granddaughter, like all grandchildren, as a vessel of hope for generations of familial struggle. Struggle during the Japanese occupation of their province during World War II, struggle during abusive machismo marriages of midcentury Philippines, and struggle as first-generation immigrants in midwestern America. The granddaughter is the family’s mouthpiece as she divulges these stories and begins to discover her own life. Entangled and enamored with her family’s history, she asks each aging generation in her family to tell her where she comes from, who she is. But as her family, and especially their matriarch, Lola Norma, ages closer to a century old, the granddaughter begins to wonder who she will become as each member of her family will eventually die. Morbid, macabre maybe, but that fear, that love, courses through each of us. Who are we when our loved ones pass? A vessel or a granddaughter in another life, perhaps. The granddaughter, through research, interviews, and simply listening to her elders when they find themselves blown into the past at the crown of a buko tree during the occupation or at a narra table before the affair, weaves together vignettes from her family to not only create a family timeline but to find herself. She finds herself weaving through buko groves, Japanese soldiers, provinces after provinces, wet markets, suburbs, and her grandmother’s home with them. In all of these places, time periods, and people, she unearths herself as an ouroboros—a girl swallowing herself whole. In essence, the only answer she ever really needed.
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A study of the Philippines : an educational project.Yoffa, Charlotte Frume 01 January 1946 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Ideological Coalitions and the International Promotion of Social Accountability: The Philippines and Cambodia ComparedRodan, G., Hughes, Caroline January 2012 (has links)
No / International aid agencies are increasingly placing social accountability at the heart of their governance
reform programs, involving a range of social activist mechanisms through which officials are rendered answerable
to the public. Crucially, aid agencies are not just promoting these mechanisms in emerging democracies,
but now also in authoritarian societies. What then are the likely political regime effects of these mechanisms?
We approach this by examining who supports social accountability, why, and the implications for political
authority. Focusing on the Philippines and Cambodia cases, it is argued that, to differing degrees, social
accountability mechanisms have been subordinated to liberal and ⁄ or moral ideologies favoring existing power
hierarchies. These ideologies often privilege nonconfrontational state–society partnerships, drawing activists
into technical and administrative processes limiting reform possibilities by marginalizing, or substituting for,
independent political action pivotal to the democratic political authority of citizens.
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Development models of the PhilippinesGaabucayan, Ma. Sheila A. 23 December 2009 (has links)
This purpose of this study is to construct computer models that can simulate national and regional development thus provide policy makers with a tool for policy experiments. This paper describes two models developed using the system dynamics methodology.
The Development Model of the Philippines (DHP) is a national model organized into seven sectors: (1) Industrial Sector, (2) Environmental Sector, (3) Infrastructure Sector, (4) Social Development, (5) Demographic Sector, (6) Agriculture Sector, and (7) Employment Sector. Six policy experiments were performed using DHP: (1) Government Support of Agriculture Policy, (2) Government Allocation to Social Services, (3) Industrial Development Policy, (4) Infrastructure,(5) Environmental Protection Policy, and (6) Zoning Policy.
The second model described in this study, called BUKID (from the filipino word for 'countryside'), is a multisectoral regional development model embodying the dynamics of rural-urban dependency with emphasis on the impact of investment on rice and corn farmers. It is composed of the following sectors: ( 1 ) Agriculture, (2 ) Industrial, ( 3 ) Demographic, and (4) Transportation. Four policy strategies that may be evaluated using BUKID are described herein. These are: (1) Land Reform, (2) Feeder Road Construction, (3) Crop Production Policy, and (4) Promotion of Agro-based Industries. / Master of Science
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