philippines

Error message

  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Deprecated function: The each() function is deprecated. This message will be suppressed on further calls in _menu_load_objects() (line 579 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/menu.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type int in element_children() (line 6600 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).
  • Deprecated function: implode(): Passing glue string after array is deprecated. Swap the parameters in drupal_get_feeds() (line 394 of /var/www/drupal-7.x/includes/common.inc).

Nhận định soi kèo Iraq vs Philippines lúc 02h00 ngày 22/3/2024

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 20/03/2024 - 5:20pm in

Tags 

Iraq, philippines

Soi kèo Châu Á Iraq vs Philippines

Đội tuyển Iraq đang có phong độ thi đấu khá ổn định trong thời gian gần đây. Theo thống kê soi kèo Iraq vs Philippines từ trang kèo Xoi Lac TV cho thấy, mặc dù để thua trong lần ra quân gần nhất, họ vẫn có được 3 chiến thắng sau 4 trận gần nhất. Do đó, nếu chơi đúng phong độ, tuyển Iraq hoàn toàn có thể dễ dàng giành chiến thắng trong trận này.

Soi kèo Iraq vs PhilippinesSoi kèo Iraq vs Philippines

Hơn nữa, được chơi trên sân nhà trong trận đấu này sẽ là một lợi thế đối với Iraq. Thống kê cho thấy, phong độ trên sân nhà của họ ở thời điểm hiện tại là khá ổn định. Với việc Iraq đã giành được 3 chiến thắng sau 4 trận gần nhất. Do vậy, cơ hội thắng trận của đội tuyển Iraq đang được đánh giá khả quan hơn nhiều.

>> Xem lại bóng đá mới nhất <<

Trong khi đó. với việc không giành chiến thắng sau 3 trận gần nhất, tuyển Philippines đang có phong độ thi đấu thiếu ấn tượng. Do vậy,,phải làm khách trên sân của đối thủ Iraq, đây thực sự là một thử thách khó khăn với họ. Nhất là khi tuyển Philippine chỉ thắng 1/5 chuyến hành quân xa nhà trước đó.

Chọn: Iraq

Soi kèo tài xỉu Iraq vs Philippines

Những trận đấu của hai đội tuyển đang có tỷ lệ nổ Tài cao hơn. Theo thống kê cho thấy, trong 4 lần ra quân liên tiếp gần nhất của tuyển Iraq đã nổ Tài. Thêm vào đó, những trận sân khách của Philippine cũng thường nổ Tài. Với việc có 3/5 trận gần nhất đã nổ Tài. Do đó, các chuyên gia dự đoán, kèo Tài sẽ thắng kèo trong trận này.

Chọn: Tài cả trận

Soi kèo Iraq vs PhilippinesSoi kèo Iraq vs Philippines
Soi kèo hiệp 1 Iraq vs Philippines 

Trước khi trận này diễn ra, tuyển Iraq thường nhập cuộc khá chủ động. Khi mà có 4/6 trận gần nhất, họ đã ghi được bàn trong hiệp 1. Mặc dù, tuyển Philippines lại đang chơi phòng ngự khá tốt. Với việc có 4/5 trận gần nhất, họ không để thủng lưới trong 45 phút đầu tiên. Tuy nhiên, tuyển Iraq vẫn sẽ sớm ghi bàn dẫn trước và thắng kèo hiệp 1 trận này.

Chọn Iraq thắng kèo hiệp 1

>> Cập nhật kết quả bóng đá hôm nay <<

Đội hình dự kiến Iraq vs Philippines

Iraq: Jalal Hassan, Suad Natiq, Ali Adnan, Hussein Ali Haidar, Osama Rashid, Amir Al Ammari, Inraheem Bayesh, Zidane Iqbal, Merchas Doski, Ali Jasim, Mohanad Ali.

Philippines: Etheridge, Sato, Murga, Rota, Tabinas, Schrock, Manny Ott, Ingreso, Mike Ott, Reichelt, Daniels.

Dự đoán tỷ số trận đấu Iraq vs Philippines

4-0 (Chọn Iraq, chọn Tài cả trận)

The post Nhận định soi kèo Iraq vs Philippines lúc 02h00 ngày 22/3/2024 appeared first on XoilacTV.

Incomplete Conquests: The Limits of Spanish Empire in the Seventeenth-Century Philippines – review

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 31/01/2024 - 8:00pm in

In Incomplete Conquests: The Limits of Spanish Empire in the Seventeenth-Century PhilippinesStephanie Joy Mawson considers histories of resistance to colonialism in the Philippines during the 1600s. While it relies on Spanish archival rather than indigenous sources, Cai Barias deems the book a worthwhile contribution to the understanding of how marginalised communities in the Philippines responded to colonial agents. This post was originally published on the LSE Southeast Asia Blog.

Incomplete Conquests: The Limits of Spanish Empire in the Seventeenth-Century Philippines. Stephanie Joy Mawson. Cornell University Press. 2023.

 The Limits of Spanish Empire in the Seventeenth-Century Philippines by Stephanie Joy Mawson This summer I began to study my own Ibanag roots, and as a budding historian, I first searched for what had been written about my father’s native Cagayan Valley. Reaching out to relatives and neighbours in Tuguegarao brought me into the company of Ibanag anthropologists, archaeologists, and historians. From my own search and their shared expertise, I found that the academic literature on Ibanag history, and the indigenous peoples of the Cagayan Valley more broadly, was regrettably scarce. The opportunity to review Stephanie Joy Mawson’s monograph, Incomplete Conquests: The Limits of Spanish Empire in the Seventeenth-Century Philippines was a welcome change of pace, and in the first few paragraphs I began to imagine myself alongside her, standing atop the Calvary Hills in Iguig to view the vast expanse of the Cagayan Valley from above.

Mawson’s deeply researched book approaches the seventeenth century from the limits of Spanish empire, and elucidates how indigenous and external threats, as much as internal Spanish shortcomings, limited Spanish imperial expansion in the Philippines.

Mawson’s deeply researched book approaches the seventeenth century from the limits of Spanish empire, and elucidates how indigenous and external threats, as much as internal Spanish shortcomings, limited Spanish imperial expansion in the Philippines. Mawson’s work rests on three main arguments. First, Mawson argues that the Spanish colonial apparatus was thinly and unevenly spread through the archipelago. Second, Mawson argues that the Spanish adapted indigenous systems of labour and belief into their own practices of governance, often with the effect of undermining their own authority. And third, by focusing on the Cagayan Valley and surrounding mountain communities, Mawson argues that the imposed distinction between highland and lowland colonial histories is historically inaccurate.

Incomplete Conquests is organised roughly thematically into seven chapters that together bring the Spanish empire into fuller view. Chapters One and Seven best demonstrate the internal limitations of Spanish colonial authority. Chapter One focuses on moments of indigenous resistance in the Philippines between 1600-1663. These crises were previously characterised as exceptional, but Mawson argues that they were endemic and inevitable due to a weak economy, political competition from indigenous datus and the Dutch, the disintegration of alliances with indigenous people, and the growth of trade with China in the port of Manila. Chapter One lays the groundwork for the rest of her narrative and demonstrates the financial and political weakness of the Spanish, as well as their struggles to maintain personnel and a physical presence throughout Luzon. This argument is further expanded in Chapter Seven, in which Mawson argues that even in the colonial seat of power, Manila, the Spanish did not wield total authority over inhabitants. Mawson finds that Spanish power in Manila was exerted through law and bureaucracy, while Chinese inhabitants wielded power economically and thus came to control the city’s food supply.

The limitations of Spanish authority had significant implications for the changes that they were able to, or not, impose on indigenous social structures in the seventeenth century.

The limitations of Spanish authority had significant implications for the changes that they were able to, or not, impose on indigenous social structures in the seventeenth century. In Chapters Two, Three, and Four, Mawson argues that the Spanish adapted to pre-Hispanic social, spiritual, and economic structures to maintain their authority. In Chapter Two, Mawson argues that pressure from indigenous elite allies forced the Spanish to adopt pre-Hispanic social and economic structures, like debt bondage. Mawson also considers how the continuation of debt bondage further entrenched the divide between wealthy and poor indigenous peoples, and how the latter overwhelmingly turned to rebellion in response to this system. Chapter Three turns to Spanish efforts at conversion against the backdrop of the indigenous spiritual landscape. Mawson considers both the literal landscape and various communities’ beliefs in spirits and signs embedded in the natural world, and missionaries’ attempts to move indigenous peoples into Spanish settlements. Finally, in Chapter Four, Mawson details the politics of slave raiding in the southern regions of the Philippine archipelago and argues that Moro leaders used slave raids deliberately to destabilise Spanish presence in the Visayas. Moro leaders also engaged in diplomacy with the Spanish and were often able to sway negotiations in their favour. Together, these three chapters show how indigenous peoples were able to maintain aspects of their politics, beliefs, and in the case of the Moros, their land, despite myriad efforts to disrupt pre-Hispanic ways of life.

Mawson details the politics of slave raiding in the southern regions of the Philippine archipelago and argues that Moro leaders used slave raids deliberately to destabilise Spanish presence in the Visayas.

Chapters Five and Six focus on the process of colonisation in the Cagayan Valley and collectively demonstrate that highland and lowland histories were intimately connected throughout. Chapter Five brings the reader to the Cagayan Valley and surrounding mountain communities to show how autonomous mountain communities and lowland fugitives moved to and from the mountains. Mawson finds that the mountains offered spaces of refuge for indigenous peoples looking to leave Spanish-controlled areas, and that the Spanish were largely unable to navigate the terrain. Chapter Six details Cagayan insurgencies from 1572-1745 and expands the argument that upland and lowland histories were intertwined: this time through social connections including trade and kinship networks. Both chapters highlight how Cagayan communities resisted Spanish incursions, by attacking settlements, threatening allies, and moving throughout the region, as early as 1580s. Through such resistance, indigenous peoples in Cagayan limited Spanish settlement in the north for the duration of seventeenth century. Mawson’s focus on the Cagayan Valley is perhaps this book’s most meaningful intervention, as few studies of this region during the seventeenth century exist.

Mawson’s focus on the Cagayan Valley is perhaps this book’s most meaningful intervention, as few studies of this region during the seventeenth century exist.

Throughout Incomplete Conquests, Mawson relies a great deal on Spanish archives with the intention of “reading the silences” for indigenous agency. On the one hand, this archive allows Mawson to recreate moments of Spanish expansion and retreat in detail. Indeed, the use of Spanish sources to demonstrate imperial weakness is appropriate and challenges a historiography that overattributes success to the Spanish empire. On the other hand, however, this method necessarily limits the reader to impressions of indios as mediated through Spanish eyes and ears. Mawson works to challenge colonial characterisations of slave raiding and headhunting as “savagery” by framing such practices within broader Southeast Asian cosmographies but falls short of including original research utilising non-colonial sources. Including a greater diversity of sources, perhaps even non-textual indigenous sources, would have only enriched Mawson’s work.

For those interested in the history of Cagayan Valley, I recommend reading this book alongside work by Cagayano researchers and academics who do the work to bridge the gap between colonialism and indigenous cultural revival

Overall, Incomplete Conquests is a thorough and engaging book and would benefit students of Philippine history, Iberian empire, and Southeast Asia alike. For those interested in the history of Cagayan Valley, I recommend reading this book alongside work by Cagayano researchers and academics who do the work to bridge the gap between colonialism and indigenous cultural revival including the Cagayan Heritage Conservation Society and the Cagayan Museum and Historical Research Center.

This book review is published by the LSE Southeast Asia blog and LSE Review of Books blog as part of a collaborative series focusing on timely and important social science books from and about Southeast Asia. This review gives the views of the author, and not the position of the LSE Review of Books blog, the LSE Southeast Asia Blog, or the London School of Economics and Political Science. 

Main Image Credit:

 

Argentina and the Philippines: Similar development struggles

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 17/12/2023 - 3:16am in

Milei is a radical libertarian populist economist with authoritarian tendencies. His proposals range from the dangerous in economics (dollarization, closing the Central Bank, a drastic reduction of social spending) and social issues (curtail human rights and democratic advances, loosen gun ownership laws, and the elimination of all those institutions that would have any relationship with his two biggest obsessions: the State and the “political caste”) to the insane: institute a free market for human organs. His election has shocked many in Argentina, but the reasons for his rapid rise are not hard to find. The Philippines has also had its share of populist presidents with also questionable ideas and behavior.

Argentina’s economy stagnated over the last decade, with an average annual rate of GDP growth of about 0.2%, and with an accumulated inflation of approximately 450%, reaching 140% on an annualized basis in October. Poverty has also soared. The poverty incidence increased from about 25% a few years ago to about 40%, when measured by the national poverty line. However, Argentina, with a population of about 46 million, is not a poor country. By the World Bank’s definition, it is an upper middle-income country with a GDP per capita of almost $12,000, about three times that of the Philippines. Argentina’s poverty rate is 2.5% by the $3.65 per day World Bank measure. The equivalent rate for the Philippines is 17.8%.