スタッフ紹介 / 訪問研究者
ABINALES, Patricio Nunez

- 部門・職位
- 政治経済共生研究部門
招へい研究員 - 専門
- Philippine political history; Southeast Asian History; American Political Development
- 研究分野/キーワード
- The illicit sector in the Philippines and Southeast Asia; elite and middle class violence in the Philippines; pandemics and politics in Southeast Asia
- 滞在期間
- 2025/03/01
2025/08/31 - 所属
- Independent Researcher
- 連絡先
- abinales@gmail.com
ABINALES, Patricio Nunez
研究概要
Everyday Authoritarianism in the Philippines: The Marcos Dictatorship and the Deradicalization of the University of the Philippines
My research examines how an authoritarian regime neutralized opposition politics without resorting to outright and open coercive means. I look at the efforts of the Marcos dictatorship to neutralize a center of radical politics – the University of the Philippines – by fashioning an atmosphere where a combination of “new” technocratic thinking, the introduction of alternative ways of “looking” at the political world and education “reforms” aimed to depoliticize and divert student interests away from agitating against the dictatorship. I will look at rules and regulations, the setting up of new policies and research centers, and how curricula were being revised and rendered politically “safe.”
The research also looks at everyday forms of resistance against the dictatorship within the administrative structures of the University. The literature on civil society resistance against dictatorship also focuses on street protests or urban or rural armed resistance. This research looks at everyday resistance within the institution. How did people “inside” the university oppose or slow down these authoritarian measures? How successful were these efforts to push back? The research, in short, takes a (second) look at the University as an arena of struggle between authoritarianism and democracy.
The research also looks at everyday forms of resistance against the dictatorship within the administrative structures of the University. The literature on civil society resistance against dictatorship also focuses on street protests or urban or rural armed resistance. This research looks at everyday resistance within the institution. How did people “inside” the university oppose or slow down these authoritarian measures? How successful were these efforts to push back? The research, in short, takes a (second) look at the University as an arena of struggle between authoritarianism and democracy.