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Upland development in the tropics alternative economic strategies in a Philippine frontier community /Conelly, W. Thomas, January 1983 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, Santa Barbara, 1983. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 375-389).
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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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Constructing globalization in the Philippines : labour, land and identity on Manila’s industrializing peripheryKelly, Philip Francis 11 1900 (has links)
'Globalization' has become a powerful icon in academic, policy and business circles.
This thesis seeks to trace some of the consequences of both the process and the idea of
globalization in the Philippines.
The thesis starts by arguing that theories of globalization - economic, technological,
political and cultural - have invested in the process an aura of inevitability and necessity. These
'logics' of globalization, widely promulgated by both the political left and right, imply a
particular construction of scale that privileges the global above all other levels of analysis. This
construction has been used as a discursive legitimation of neoliberal policy prescriptions for
development. In seeking to destabilize this construction of the global scale, the rest of the thesis
demonstrates the ways in which global flows (particularly of capital and cultural meanings) are in
fact embedded, mediated and activated in local social relations in the Philippines.
This empirically-based argument starts with a brief historical account of Philippine
relations with 'global space' from pre-colonial times to the present, demonstrating that the
relationship has been contingent and politically contested over time and has owed as much to
national level power relations as to global forces. In the last few decades, in particular,
'globalization' has been both a key material process in the Philippine economy, and an important
part of the Ramos administration's legitimation of its development strategies. These have
included deregulation, decentralization, trade liberalization, and encouraging foreign direct
investment in export manufacturing. This investment has exhibited a spatial concentration in the
core region around Manila, and particularly in the province of Cavite. Through multiple scales
of analysis - provincial, municipal, village, household and individual -I explore the ways in
which experiences of 'globalized' development in Cavite and two of its villages are embedded in
'local' social, economic, environmental, political and cultural processes. These experiences
come principally in the form of: changing local labour markets, land conversion from agricultural
to urban-industrial uses, and the reworking of cultural identities.
One central argument is proposed throughout: that viewing globalization as an inevitable
and unavoidable context for development is inappropriate; instead, the processes of globalization
must be seen as embedded in social processes and power relations operating in particular places.
This argument embodies two further points. First, that the 'places' in which globalization is
embedded are at multiple scales which must be seen as interlinked and overlapping rather than
distinct and hierarchical. Secondly, while globalization, and its embeddedness in places,
operates as a material process, it is also a social construction and political discourse which, by
locating the 'driving force' of social change at the global scale, serves to legitimize certain
practices and construct a particular relationship between the 'local' and the 'global'.
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A socio-economic evaluation of the supervised cattle distribution program in the PhilippinesDuthy, Stephen (Stephen W.) Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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A socio-economic evaluation of the supervised cattle distribution program in the PhilippinesDuthy, Stephen (Stephen W.) Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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Constructing globalization in the Philippines : labour, land and identity on Manila’s industrializing peripheryKelly, Philip Francis 11 1900 (has links)
'Globalization' has become a powerful icon in academic, policy and business circles.
This thesis seeks to trace some of the consequences of both the process and the idea of
globalization in the Philippines.
The thesis starts by arguing that theories of globalization - economic, technological,
political and cultural - have invested in the process an aura of inevitability and necessity. These
'logics' of globalization, widely promulgated by both the political left and right, imply a
particular construction of scale that privileges the global above all other levels of analysis. This
construction has been used as a discursive legitimation of neoliberal policy prescriptions for
development. In seeking to destabilize this construction of the global scale, the rest of the thesis
demonstrates the ways in which global flows (particularly of capital and cultural meanings) are in
fact embedded, mediated and activated in local social relations in the Philippines.
This empirically-based argument starts with a brief historical account of Philippine
relations with 'global space' from pre-colonial times to the present, demonstrating that the
relationship has been contingent and politically contested over time and has owed as much to
national level power relations as to global forces. In the last few decades, in particular,
'globalization' has been both a key material process in the Philippine economy, and an important
part of the Ramos administration's legitimation of its development strategies. These have
included deregulation, decentralization, trade liberalization, and encouraging foreign direct
investment in export manufacturing. This investment has exhibited a spatial concentration in the
core region around Manila, and particularly in the province of Cavite. Through multiple scales
of analysis - provincial, municipal, village, household and individual -I explore the ways in
which experiences of 'globalized' development in Cavite and two of its villages are embedded in
'local' social, economic, environmental, political and cultural processes. These experiences
come principally in the form of: changing local labour markets, land conversion from agricultural
to urban-industrial uses, and the reworking of cultural identities.
One central argument is proposed throughout: that viewing globalization as an inevitable
and unavoidable context for development is inappropriate; instead, the processes of globalization
must be seen as embedded in social processes and power relations operating in particular places.
This argument embodies two further points. First, that the 'places' in which globalization is
embedded are at multiple scales which must be seen as interlinked and overlapping rather than
distinct and hierarchical. Secondly, while globalization, and its embeddedness in places,
operates as a material process, it is also a social construction and political discourse which, by
locating the 'driving force' of social change at the global scale, serves to legitimize certain
practices and construct a particular relationship between the 'local' and the 'global'. / Arts, Faculty of / Geography, Department of / Graduate
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