Thursday, November 22, 2018

Palawan’s (un)sustainable development

SECOND OPINION: Palawan’s (un)sustainable development
Philippine Daily Inquirer
22 November 2018

Gideon Lasco 
Columnist 

PUERTO PRINCESA — Having lived in Palawan for over a year and having come and gone over the past decade, I can attest to its natural beauty: from the spellbinding forests of Cleopatra’s Needle and Mount Mantalingahan to the stunning beaches of El Nido and Coron. Even while walking along Puerto Princesa’s acacia-lined streets, one cannot help but be charmed by the island’s relatively pristine state.

This beauty, however, is facing numerous threats, a fact raised by President Duterte — who visited recently. Calling the island’s attractions a “crown jewel,” he told Palawan officials: “Itong (lugar) ninyo, linisin ninyo. Huwag ninyong overload. Bantay kayo d’yan. (Clean up your place, don’t overload it. Guard it.)” He also called on the officials not to allow hotels to be built near beaches, and warned that “nobody can claim ownership” of the island’s coastlines.

While the President was being feted by local politicians, scholars were likewise discussing the environmental state of Palawan, in the annual conference of the Ugnayang Agham-Tao (Ugat) — the association of Philippine anthropologists. Held at the Palawan State University (PSU), its theme could not have been more apt: “Doing Anthropology in Times of Environmental Crisis.” Among the issues raised were the impact of environmental changes (and laws) on indigenous peoples and the accommodation of mining projects by moving Environmentally Critical Areas Network  zones.

Doubtless, many Palaweños have benefited from economic growth: PSU graduates are choosing to stay in Puerto Princesa, where the growing tourism and service sectors have opened up more career opportunities; or elsewhere on the island, with mining and other industries. The city’s amenities, meanwhile, have made it a more attractive place for professionals to settle in or retire.

But there are also questions about the price of this so-called “development.” With its population tripling over the past 25 years, Puerto Princesa is showing signs of urban congestion, from burgeoning informal settlements and worsening traffic to recurring power outages and rising cost of living. “The city is losing its character,” one of my friends laments, referencing the trees, now gone, that used to be part of the landscape. “Soon we will look like any other Philippine city.”

As the elections draw near, I would like to challenge Palawan’s local officials to put environmental conversation and long-term planning at the heart of their policies and programs. Alas, the Palawan Council for Sustainable Development has lacked the political support to implement its mandate, and local officials have been slow to act on environmental concerns.

For his part, President Duterte speaks of the need to protect Palawan, but he must realize that significant threats to the province include the island-building in Kalayaan and the illegal poaching by Chinese fishermen in the West Philippine Sea. Thus, in light of his subservience to China, he must also direct his challenge to himself. Moreover, given the potentially grave environmental consequences of dividing Palawan into three provinces, I urge him not to sign this move — which reeks of gerrymandering — into law.

As for my friends in Palawan and all Palaweños, I know it is too much to ask them to follow the footsteps of the late Dr. Gerry Ortega, whose murder in broad daylight is a continuing reminder of the risks involved in activism. But supporting environmental organizations, patronizing sustainable tourism initiatives, and voting for officials who genuinely have the island’s interest in mind can all make a big difference. So can academic work that affirms, to borrow from the Ugat conference theme, “our interconnectedness” with nature and documents the threats to our shared fate.

It is time to arrest Palawan’s unsustainable development before it’s too late to undo the damage wrought by human greed and irresponsibility—not to mention political complicity and neglect. Indeed, whether we are leaders, citizens, scholars or friends of Palawan, the legacy we should strive for is not that that we “developed” the island—but that we left it as beautiful as it once was.

Follow @gideonlasco on Twitter. Send feedback to glasco@inquirer.com.ph.


Reference: https://opinion.inquirer.net/117639/palawans-unsustainable-development

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Anthropology majors lack support, funds for field school



No funding nor assistance and not a word of support from their own department—for anthropology undergraduates, these have been the recent struggles they face trying to finish their field school.

Yearly, students head to a pre-selected site selected by the Department of Anthropology which is based in the College of Social Sciences and Philosophy (CSSP).The activity, which is held in the mid-year semester before students graduate, has anthropology undergraduates produce reports of their communities through interviews and observations on the site.

Students are expected to shell out money for whatever expenses come up during their visit, while these costs typically hover around P10,000, said Edwin Valientes, this year's field school director for Mahatao, Batanes. These expenditures, meanwhile, include fees for accommodations, meals, and, in some instances, plane tickets for domestic or, sometimes even, travel abroad.

Raising money for the requirement usually involves much effort for students: holding income-generating projects, securing corporate sponsorships, grants, solicitations, and student cash-outs are just some of the options undergraduates count on to get by. But even with all the trouble, often these efforts can still come up short. Last year’s batch of field school participants, for example, held various projects over the course of eight months. The money those same projects earned, however, remained inadequate in funding their Batangas field school. This year’s batch of field schools in Mahatao and Pasig, similarly, found themselves still in need of money even after raising as much as P200,000.

Covering these fees without support was difficult, recalled Frances Sajor who went to the 2018 field school.

"The expenses had actually become heavy to the point that one of my classmates had to borrow money to attend the field school," Sajor recalled.

Forced Independence

Part of the struggle to raise money stems from the department not providing students with enough information to estimate their expenses on-site, remarked Kate Purnell, who spearheaded the fundraising projects for her batch.

“I really feel like things would have been easier if the department cared more about the welfare of its students,” she said, “Sabi nila ‘[kayong mga estudyante] na bahala mag-isip.’”

On the other hand, while some faculty members would buy the items students sell, the department as a unit does not offer any support, recalled 2017 batch head Dana Castillo.

Some students bound for field school last year, however, were able to secure P100,000 in reimbursements from the Office of the Chancellor after contacting corporations and non-government organizations had failed to yield results. Participants received the reimbursements later on after completing their field school. Castillo emphasized, however, that such cases are not typical.

The department should not be expected to subsidize the field school's fees as it is a course requirement, while students are oriented months before the activity itself, said Dr. Monica Santos, the director for this year’s field school in Pasig. Instances of reimbursements, on the other hand, also depend on the department’s budget for the field school director, while it is also ultimately the director’s prerogative whether to provide funding or not, Santos noted.

“It’s like kapag nag-prescribe kami ng textbook sa klase, hindi kami ang nagbibigay ng textbook for you. Hindi namin i-susubsidize ‘yun for you...in the case of the field school, it’s something that is part of the curriculum so it’s really something that you have to consider,” Santos remarked.

On the other hand, she also emphasized that the undergraduates’ expenses ultimately depend on their lifestyle. “Kung gusto mong mag-Starbucks araw-araw, eh aabot talaga sa trenta mil gagastusin mo.”

Stalemate

Paolo Sevilla, finance officer for this year’s field school, was critical of the administration’s stance.

“We choose how much to spend, but certain things are non-negotiable expenses that are almost binary in that they are either there or absent. This includes [the] cost of basic food, basic lodging, and transport to a field site that is not of our choosing.”

Though the administration has met with departments which hold field schools to discuss their needs, the university has no concrete plans to address the fees incurred by the activity. For now, students can request assistance through grant applications on campus, though support is not always guaranteed, said Madilene Landicho, who was a field school director last year.

Amid anthropology majors’ field school woes, former anthropology representative to the CSSP Student Council Lakan Umali took the initiative to push for the institutionalization of the field school in order to formalize funding from the university.

“Nagkaroon ng dialogue ang League of College Councils with Chancellor Tan where we brought up the institutionalization of funding for Field School,” recalled Umali. He was later advised to approach the Vice Chancellor for Research and Development, who replied that they could not fund undergraduates–only graduate students and faculty members.

Though his efforts did not bear fruit, the current department representative to the CSSP Student Council, Sophie Del Prado, confirmed that the council will still lobby for financial support.

Purnell, on the other hand, still believes that the department should offer their students assistance regardless of the university’s supposed lack of funding for undergraduates, even if only through helping them find groups which can sponsor the field school.

“Just because it’s the norm doesn’t meant that it’s right. We’re trying to push for free education here in this school, and the fact that we have to still pay for stuff that’s part of the education just backfires,” she said.

Philippine Collegian

https://www.facebook.com/phkule/posts/1944731108941160?__tn__=K-R

Monday, November 12, 2018

UGAT Annual Conferences (1978 to 2018)

40 years of commitment to the promotion of anthropological knowledge and participation to integrated national consciousness development and nation building.


1st (1978, Laguna) "Philippine Anthropology Today”
2nd (1979, Baguio City) “The Power of Anthropology: A Dialogue Among Developers”
3rd (1980, Cebu City) “The Filipino and His Changing Environment”
4th (1981, Dumaguete City) “The Anthropology of Power”
5th (1982, Iligan City) “Anthropology and Technology: Third World Perspectives
6th (1983, North Cotabato) “Anthropology of Mass Movements: Peoples Organizations in Social Transformation”
7th (1984, Bukidnon) “The Anthropology of the Future: Emerging Structures and Processes”
8th (1985, Legaspi City) “Anthropology of Education: Contribution to Nationhood”
9th (1987, Cagayan de Oro City) “Culture Change and National Development”
10th (1988, Marawi City) “Ethnicity and National Unity”


11th (1989, Tacloban City) “Anthropology and Resistance”
12th (1990, Manila) “Philippine Ethnography: Issues in Cultural Pluralism and Nationhood”
13th (1991, Manila) “Anthropology of Philippine Anthropology: Issues and Concerns for the Nineties”
14th (1992, Laguna) “Anthropology of Development: Issues and Concerns of the Nineties”
15th (1993, Cebu City) “Sustainability of Development: The Anthropological Perspective”
16th (1994, General Santos City) “The Anthropology of Transformation”
17th (1995, Nueva Ecija) “Anthropology of Disaster”
18th (1996, Benguet) “The Indigenous Peoples of the Philippines: Knowledge, Power and Struggles”
19th (1997, Palawan) “Territoriality, Histories and Identities”
20th (1998, Quezon City) “Philippine Anthropology in the 21st Century”


21st (1999, Albay) “The Use and Abuse of Anthropology in the Philippines”
22nd (2000, Misamis Oriental) “Theory and Practice of Philippines Anthropology: Reviewing the Past to View the Future”
23rd (2001, UP Diliman) “Bridging the Generations in Philippine Anthropology”
24th (2002, Davao City) “Rootwork and Network: Weaving Mindanao Anthropology”
25th (2003, Cebu City) “Writing Philippine Ethnography”
26th (2004, Cagayan de Oro City) “The Ends of Educating”
27th (2005, Miagao) “The Anthropology of Crisis”
28th (2006, Dumaguete) “The Philippines Unbound: Anthropological Critiques of Globalization”
29th (2007, Zamboanga City) “The Practice of Governance”
30th (2008, Pampanga) “Performing Heritage”


31st (2009, Cagayan de Oro) “The (Re)Making of Cities and its Consequences”
32nd (2010, Manila) “Kalkhasan in Flux: Indigenous Peoples’ Creativity in a Changing Natural Environment”
33rd (2011, Bukidnon) “Aghamtaong Kaagapay: Anthropology Cares for Its Publics”
34th (2012, Cebu City) “Culture” and “Well-being”: Conceptualizations, Appropriations, Implications
35th (2013, Davao City) “Rethinking & Remaking Forms of Knowledge”
36th (2014, Baguio City) “Trajectories of the Anthropological in the Philippines”
37th (2015, Dumaguete) “Dagat Ug Kinabuhi: Maritime Cultures, Spaces & Networks”
38th (2016, Quezon City) “Circulating Anthropological Knowledge in the Public Sphere: Building Communities of Practice”
39th (2017, Cagayan de Oro) “The Struggle for Rights: Anthropological Reflection on What Is and What Ought To Be”
40th (2018, Palawan) “Our Interconnectedness: Doing Anthropology in a Time of Ecological Crisis”


UGAT 40th Annual Conference, An International Gathering. Our Interconnectedness: Doing Anthropology in a Time of Ecological Crisis. Book of Abstracts. 2018. Quezon City: Ugnayang Pang-Aghamtao, Inc. (UGAT). pp 117-118.

Saturday, November 10, 2018

Aghamtao 28 - Call for Submissions

We are now accepting article submissions for Vol. 28 of AGHAMTAO, the official and peer-reviewed journal of the Ugnayang Pang-Aghamtao, Inc. (UGAT), Inc. This issue will carry the theme, “Our Interconnectedness: Doing Anthropology in a Time of Ecological Crisis.” The editors are especially interested in full versions of the papers or presentations read during that conference; articles or essays that engage with such papers or presentations; or which otherwise address the state, complexity and dynamics of confronting the ecological crises that threaten entire species and ways of life.  Submissions that do not meet these criteria, but have clear substantive, theoretical or methodological merit, shall be given due consideration for inclusion in the issue.

Please email submissions to aghamtaojournal@gmail.com as soon as possible in order to be considered for the issue, which is scheduled for launch during the UGAT Annual National Conference in 2019. To allow for the review process, the closing date for submissions for this particular issue is 30 April 2019. Submissions received beyond this date however may be considered for succeeding issues of the journal.

Article submissions must be emailed in MS Word .doc format, accompanied by an abstract of not more than 250 words.  All figures (numbered and with captions) must be in a separate file. The minimum length for an article submission is 3,000 words. For referencing style, kindly consult recent issues of AghamTao.


Very truly yours,


Padmapani L. Perez, Issue Editor
and the Editorial Board of AGHAMTAO Vol. 28


UGAT 40th Annual Conference, An International Gathering. Our Interconnectedness: Doing Anthropology in a Time of Ecological Crisis. Book of Abstracts. 2018. Quezon City: Ugnayang Pang-Aghamtao, Inc. (UGAT). pp 116. 

UGAT 40th Annual Conference - In Photos

UGNAYANG PANG-AGHAMTAO, INC. (UGAT)
Anthropological Association of the Philippines
and
Palawan State University (PSU)

40th Annual Conference
An International Gathering
OUR INTERCONNECTEDNESS:
DOING ANTHROPOLOGY IN A TIME OF ECOLOGICAL CRISIS
8-10 November 2018
Puerto Princesa City, Palawan

IN PHOTOS


 Photo by Fred Precillas


 Photo by Fred Precillas


 Photo by Fred Precillas


 Photo by Fred Precillas


 Photo by Fred Precillas


Photo by Fred Precillas

 Photo by Fred Precillas


 Photo by Fred Precillas


 Photo by Fred Precillas


Photo by Fred Precillas

 Photo by Fred Precillas


Photo by Fred Precillas

Photo by Fred Precillas

 Photo by Hannah May Rosario

 Photo by Fred Precillas

 Photo by Fatima Gay Molina

 Photo by Fred Precillas

 Photo by Fred Precillas

 Photo by Fred Precillas

 Photo by Fred Precillas

 Photo by Fred Precillas

 Photo by Fred Precillas

 Photo by Fred Precillas

 Photo by Fred Precillas

Photo by Thea Tandog

Friday, November 9, 2018

Stuart A. Schlegel, University of California, Santa Cruz

STUART A. SCHLEGEL
Professor Emeritus 
University of California, Santa Cruz

25 October 1932 - 09 November 2018 


Stu Schlegel spent nearly two years in the mid-1960s in a Philippine rainforest with the Teduray people (known until recently as "Tiruray") -- and wishes he could have never left!

Photo from Stu Schlegel's facebook, https://www.facebook.com/stu.schlegel

Friday, November 2, 2018

UGAT 40th Annual Conference - Book of Abstracts

UGNAYANG PANG-AGHAMTAO, INC. (UGAT)
Anthropological Association of the Philippines
and
Palawan State University (PSU)

40th Annual Conference
An International Gathering
OUR INTERCONNECTEDNESS:
DOING ANTHROPOLOGY IN A TIME OF ECOLOGICAL CRISIS
8-10 November 2018
Puerto Princesa City, Palawan

BOOK OF ABSTRACTS 


Cover and book design by Anthony John R. Balisi

UGAT 40th Annual Conference BOA - download here

UGAT 40th Annual Conference BOA Addenda - download here