Tag Archives: democracy
Our Right to Vote: A Century After
A cornerstone principle and bedrock of our 1987 Constitution is that the Philippines is a republican and democratic state. One of the hallmarks of democracy is the people’s right to vote. With the rising temperature of the election fever during these cold February days, allow me to speak on this crucial topic, even though it may have lost its appeal to many who now view elections as merely a chimerical episode of democracy amidst the political realities in our country.
In ancient times, the great thinkers did not easily subscribe to democracy. Dismissing it as a riotous rule by the masses, Plato disapproved of democracy. He cautioned that if all the people would rule, those of low quality would dominate the state by mere superiority in numbers. He expressed the fear that the more numerous masses would govern with meaness and usher the “tyranny of the majority.” Plato predicted that democracies would be short-lived, as the mob would inevitably surrender its power to a single tyrant and put an end to popular government.
Plato’s prophecy did not come to pass. Democracy meandered through the Middle Ages in Europe, which elevated the importance of the equality of all men and sparked a revival of interest in democracy. It migrated to the United States of America, whose Founding Fathers espoused its liberal ideas.
John Dryzek’s Discursive Democracy and Environmentalism in the Philippines
abstract
The heightened consciousness for environmental concern has become one of the defining facets of both the past and current decades. It has elicited discussions not only among experts from the domain of the scientifically and technologically oriented sciences, but even among social theorists especially those primarily involvement in political theorizing. One of the key areas being studied here is the contribution of environmental movements in democratic theory. It is in this context that this article will analyze the environmental movement in the Philippines and the various strategies that it employs in contributing toward greater democratization of Philippine society. To accomplish this task, John Dryzek’s notion of discursive democracy will be used as a conceptual framework. This type of democracy justifies the presence of an oppositional public sphere that operates both outside and against the state to facilitate better democratization.
Introduction
he past decade and the present have witnessed the growing and evolving environmental consciousness both in the global and national arena. While traditional environmental issues, namely, pollution-causing industrial activities, destruction of forest covers, siltation and water pollution, and the use of highly fertilized crops, continue to pervade public discourse, the devastating effects of global warming due to climate change have started to dominate the global discourse on the environment. On the national level, there is also the heated discussion on the issue of mining involving various sectors that include national and local stakeholders,grassroots and elite, nongovernment organizations (NGOs), business, and government sectors. On the local level, issues such as aerial spraying, the plan of putting up coal-fired power plants, and the cutting of trees for commercial purposes have also embraced headlines, therefore eliciting heated debates.
These debates and discourses have exposed the potential harms and actual effects of environmental problems, paving the way for various actions undertaken both by the government and the civil society. At the executive level, quick response mechanisms and long-term disaster risk reduction and mitigation have been setup to respond to both human-made and natural calamities. There is also the renewed vigor toward pushing for programs that include reforestation, use of renewable energy, and pollution control. At the legislative level, various policies, laws and ordinances have been initiated to strengthen responses in mitigating the effects of climate change and other environmental problems. Meanwhile, at the civil society level, activities such as lobbying, conducting dialogue with various stakeholders, holding sit-down strikes, street protests, civil disobedience, and in extreme cases, monkey wrenching, have been undertaken in order to bring the issue of environmentalism at the forefront of policy agenda and reform.
While the collective response from the government always falls short of expectation and is often considered inefficient, ineffective, and controversial, the actions carried out by civil society groups are considered rather radical, excessive, and out of bounds. A significant portion of Philippine society considers environmental movement as mainly, if not only, constituted by the elite. However, there are other groups in the movement which are characterized as insurgents, and the means they employ as terroristic, because of their use of extra legal, extra constitutional and paragovernmental strategies. There are also those who are considered as nuisance because their way of proceeding lacks substance. Given the varied sentiments and expressions that have provided a concrete face to the environmental movement in the Philippines, and given the various strategies employed by different proponents, there is a pertinent problematique that begs to ask the question whether environmentalism in the Philippine context still contributes to democratization, or that it only impedes the democratic process.
This paper argues that the environmental movement in the Philippines, except those that involve terrorism, contributes to greater democratization. Specifically, this greater possibility for democratization lies on the oppositional character typical of new social movements, one of which is the environmental movement. It is, therefore, argued that democratization is best achieved if it is located outside of the state, that is, within the domain of civil society and the public sphere. To defend this position, John Dryzek’s notion of discursive democracy will be used as the overall framework. I will further support this framework by taking into account empirical researches undertaken by social scientists that look specifically at the environmental movement in the Philippines. The discussion will proceed in four parts. The first part will discuss Dryzek’s critique of capitalist states founded on economic rationality and ideology. The second part will discuss the idea of democratization and how it can flourish better with the presence of oppositional public sphere within civil society. The third part will apply Dryzek’s discursive democracy in the context of the Philippines’ growing environmental movement. The last part will present a brief conclusion.
Limits of Capitalist Democracy
Dryzek’s defense of environmentalism as contributory to greater democracy can be better grasped by discussing the primary constraints to this greater democratization. One of these constraints is the presence of a capitalist state with its underpinning principles that include economic rationality and ideology, made operational through the corporatist, constitutional democratic models. The inability of the dominant capitalist state to accommodate the concerns of environmental advocacies, classified as part of the new social movements, shows its lack of openness toward greater democratization. By describing how the capitalist state operates, including its internal relation to economic rationality and ideology, a better understanding of its limits in the face of contemporary environmental challenges can perhaps be achieved.
The capitalist state has previously been effective in incorporating different sectoral concerns to facilitate greater democratization. Political developments show that the capitalist state has assimilated various external demands and transformed them as state imperatives. Dryzek contends that in the historical development of the modern state, it was able to expand its imperatives to incorporate pressing sociopolitical demands.The incorporation of the bourgeois concerns facilitated the breaking away from feudalism, while the accommodation of the proletariat concerns facilitated the development of welfare-type systems. In both of these developments, the capitalist state was effective in facilitating the movement from parochial and authoritarian considerations to better democratic structures. Yet, together with this development, and partly brought about by the need to meet internal demands, is the emergence of state imperative necessary to increase revenue commonly referred to as economic growth (Dryzek 1996; Dryzek et al., 2003). Such economic growth is needed not only by the elite, now represented by the business sectors, to finance their industries, but also by the working class to respond to their growing demands.
Dryzek (1996) argues that while the emphasis on economic growth is taken as a positive step to some extent, it unfortunately renders the liberal capitalistic state stagnant in pushing for greater democratization. Since public discourse focuses on the market and how business investments can help expand the economic pie, other discourses including environmental concerns are constrained, curtailed, or marginalized. Environmental concerns are hardly taken as part of the state imperative, since bringing up environmental issues often threatens the market and leads to the pullout of investors. Such a scenario could result in recession, loss of revenue, and eventually failure of the state. What makes matters worse is that environmental issues are seen as problems which need to be eliminated. It is no wonder that these are relegated to the periphery in relation to state imperatives.
According to Dryzek (1996, 92415), the structural problems in the capitalist state manifest a deeper problem besetting modern industrial societies. This is the problem of economic rationality that has pervaded modern and contemporary societies, affecting citizens’ attitudes and their very understanding of political reality. The economic rationality that Dryzek particularly criticizes is capitalism’s promotion of and preference for individualism. Individualism has been cited as being responsible for the lack of common and shared understanding in responding to collective problems primarily about environmental hazards. Dryzek (1996, 145) succinctly expresses this characterization of the individual that typifies the capitalistic rationality:
Democracy under capitalism is hard to sustain because of the grave-digging individuals that capitalism increasingly produces…Public choice theorists have demonstrated that a politics of unconstrained strategy in pursuit of individual desires is an incoherent mess in which policy outcomes are arbitrarily connected to public preferences, responding instead to the narrow self-interest of politicians, bureaucrats and concentrated interests.
Dryzek (1996, 116-144) further argues that economic rationality has unfortunately become an ideology, if not “the” ideology that has triumphed over other ideologies. Consequently, people are no longer keen to look for and provide other alternatives. Most have accepted that this economic ideology anchored in individualism is the only alternative and, therefore, should be readily adopted. In this condition, the reflexive attitude among citizens is lost, a condition which could unnecessarily put at stake the potential for citizens’ greater participation in public discourse. Applied to environmental issues, democratization in dealing specifically with environmental problems is diminished.
The capitalist state also finds a problematic partner in liberalism, the basic tenets of which are human autonomy and the capacity for reason. These two tenets that help rationalize the market-based and economic rationality have served as foundations of the capitalist state also popularly known as liberal capitalist democracy. This particular democracy functions through a constitutional setup. Although Dryzek (2000, 8-30) recognizes the importance of liberal democracy given the various liberal principles it promotes, he finds the constitutional setup through which it operates as problematic. The liberal democratic model expressed in constitutionalism is flawed because of its adherence to the capitalist rationality of individualism.
Furthermore, constitutionalism is found to be problematic because it cannot account for the various forms of deliberations within the context of the state. Conventionally, constitutionalism operates by way of aggregation in which oftentimes minority and alternative voices are superseded. One example which typifies this is the election where voters are given no access to extensive and varied discourses prior to making choices during the actual exercise of their right of suffrage. This situation is contrary to democracy’s need to account for other forces that include alternative discursive arenas other than the formal ones.
Meanwhile, liberal capitalist democracy promotes corporatism. Only a select and core apparatus of the central government, mostly on the executive level with minimal assistance from the legislative side, run the government. Obviously, similar to constitutionalism, corporatism is unable to promote greater democratization mainly due to its exclusive and secretive procedures as opposed to more inclusive and transparent ones (Bantas 2010a).
Civil Society and Democratization
Owing to problems that beset the liberal capitalist state, Dryzek locates the opportunity for greater democratization in the public sphere specifically in the domain of civil society. It is in this domain where adopting a critical attitude is maintained especially in relation to the main apparatus of the state. It is also in this sphere where individualism is countered by focusing on the common good through republicanism. Finally, it is in this domain where the oppositional character of civil society is revealed, serving as a catalyst for fostering greater democracy. It is in civil society where Dryzek (2000, 81-114) sees the potential for reflexive modernity to be fully realized, where the critical method is recognized and greater democratization achieved. Dryzek refers to this as discursive democracy because of its greater openness for variety of discourses. In defense of his position, Dryzek (1996, 15) writes:
I shall make arguments about the kinds of democracy worth pursuing, on behalf of a democracy that is deliberative, rather than aggregative, republican rather than liberal, communicative rather than strategic, disrespectful of the boundaries of political units, pursued in civil society rather than the state, and consistent with broad rather than narrow definitions of politics.
Dryzek (2000, 81-114) understands civil society as a set of voluntary associations arranged against the state, that is, apart from the state but not designed to takeover state power. It is important to clarify here that Dryzek is not keen in replacing the existing liberal capitalist democracy with another system of governance. Instead, he seeks to locate avenues within the existing liberal capitalist state where greater democratization can be made possible.
At first sight, understanding politics on the basis of how active civil society is appears to be limited. A myopic understanding of politics regards the state as traditionally made up of those bodies or entities that are constitutional in nature. These include judges in the courts of law, political candidates, or government officials in the executive and legislative departments (Bantas 2010b). The traditional definition of the state is inclusive only of the constitutional component that excludes the civil society, relegating the latter to the private domain. This is a dominant view in most liberal democratic literature primarily championed by John Rawls (1995). But Dryzek’s view on politics runs counter to the traditional definition. By privileging the domain of civil society, he believes that greater democratization can be opened. In which case, civil society operates as an alternative venue that is located outside of the periphery of the state, but still political in its character.
Dryzek sees hope in civil society’s being less prone to inclusion, which he uniquely characterizes as being part of the constitutional core of the state. The concept of being less prone to inclusion is self-limiting. It means that it does not seek to share in state power, unlike political parties whose engagement with the state is geared toward taking over power from those that control it. A clear example of inclusion is the role played by labor parties. They started as a social movement carrying the concerns of the working class but later took over the reign of governance from the bourgeois after it gained entry into parliament, thus forming the welfare state. It has to be understood that the role of civil society then was to expose power especially that of the state which sought to control mechanisms that supplanted alternative views and voices. Another democratic character of civil society is exemplified by its being less concerned with a static understanding of itself. In fact, it continues to redefine and recreate its identity, thus making it less hierarchical and more fluid. Finally, it has also positioned itself as a third force in the historical development of the capitalist state, seeking to address the limits of a welfare state model that has mixed liberal capitalism with socialist concerns (Dryzek 1996, 50).
Dryzek (2000, 87) also characterizes this public sphere that is civil society as oppositional which, he says, is important since historically “democratization indicates that pressures for greater democracy almost always emanate from insurgency in oppositional civil society or never from the state itself” The bourgeois and the working class oppositions are typical examples of this. Their successful struggle against the state leads to the successful integration of their concerns into state imperative, thus creating the capitalist state and the welfare state, respectively.
However, Dryzek acknowledges that because civil society is a heterogeneous place wherein various forms of association outside of the state converge, not everyone in civil society promotes democratization. There are those who would resort to extremist means, while others are still very hierarchical. Thus, Dryzek clarifies that the social movements in civil society that are relevant toward the fulfillment of modernity’s potential are those that can really contribute to greater democratization. In other words, these are social movements that meet the democratic criteria: Self-limiting, fluid in defining its identity, and using democratic means that pursue discourse rather than violence (Dryzek 2000, 100).
In asserting the significant role of civil society, Dryzek narrows down the venue of democratization into the domain of the public sphere. Although he admits that civil society is a heterogeneous association which may or may not promote greater democratization, he believes that the public sphere provides the venue in which discourse promotes alternative discussion of key issues. For purposes of distinction, he classifies further the private domains of civil society that do not seek to participate in public discourse as separate from the domain of the public sphere. These private domains include neighborhood associations, spontaneous groupings, workplaces and other pockets of private associations (Dryzek 1996, 47 -61). With this distinction, Dryzek asserts that it is in the public sphere where the growth of democracy is made possible.
However, it is important to note that while social movements in civil society are defined as self-limiting, it does not mean that civil society is powerless. Dryzek illustrates civil society’s power by characterizing its oppositional strategy. Firstly, political action in civil society cannot only change the terms of political discourse, it can also influence the content of public policy. Secondly, the power of public protest can produce lasting effects by legitimating collective actions as permanent mechanism that responds to issues in the public agenda. This is contrary to the view that public protests produce only burnt-out and co-opted activists. Thirdly, policy-oriented deliberative fora that include conferences and public consultation can be constituted within the civil society itself. Finally, protest in civil society can sow fear of political instability and so draw forth a governmental response (Dryzek 2000, 101).
Dryzek’s theoretical position on the oppositional character of the social movements actually challenges other contemporary theories of democracy. Pluralist theorists like Iris Marion Young and Anne Phillips, both representing the difference democratic position, welcome the inclusion of minority voices into the state imperative to make the state more expansive. Dryzek, however, finds the difference democratic position as counter-intuitive. In his research, he provides concrete evidences of this involving leading countries in environmental discourse, most of which practice corporatist, liberal, capitalist democracies (Dryzek et. al, 2003).
Perhaps a good example of the limits of inclusion can be observed in Norway, where active corporatism is applied as a system of governance. In this scheme, the central government provides extensive support and even funded social movements and groups. Those involved in environmental advocacy in particular received government funding. The result, however, as validated by Dryzek’s research, shows that Norway has the least active environmental groups in civil society, and has less environmental advocacies that challenge state policies. Thus, while Norway presents a good statistic model in responding to environmental problems, it is limited in terms of promoting and giving venue for non state actors to participate in public policy. It is glaring to note that public protests in Norway have been nonexistent, except in the 1980 protests against the creation of a hydropower plant. It is also notable that issues involving whaling, which has been the target of various environmental groups, remain largely unaddressed in Norway (Dryzek et al., 2003).
On the contrary, Germany is a case where its corporatism promotes passive exclusion. Its benign refusal to involve environmental groups in its policy formulation, until after recently, has led to the proliferation of various green groups that include the Green Peace, and eventually, the Green Party. However, despite the creation of a green party, a flourishing civil society does exist and continue to expand, challenging continuously the state apparatus and even its Green Party ally. In fact, at the policy level the presence of civil society is influential in making Germany a leading proponent of environmental modernization and risk society, the two models which are responsible in responding to environmental hazards and threats (Dryzek et al., 2003).
Dryzek, of course, acknowledges that for social movements in civil society to be successful, they also have to become part of state imperatives. This trajectory would eventually lead to the creation of a green state, parallel to that of a bourgeois capitalist state and a welfare state. However, in cases where inclusion becomes benign, or even active to the point that participants in the social movement are co-opted, or that their discursive capacity are depleted or compromised, then the strategies that define the oppositional character must be pursued.
More so, Dryzek notes that inclusion, as well as the desire for that which characterizes social movements, can make the environmental groups lose their democratic character. Their persistence to be included and legitimized can lead to the creation of hierarchies among the members of the social movement itself, thus sacrificing the democratic setup that has sustained it. This is typified, for example, by groups like the Green Peace and the Green Party in Germany which, in acting as political parties, have also elected officials to represent the green movement. In the process, however, these elected officials have ceased to listen and address the voice of their constituents as they were already co-opted by virtue of their membership in the parliament.
Dryzek does not discount the dual strategy which includes both inclusion in the state and maintenance of the oppositional character in civil society. This is the ideal setup. However, there are cases like that of Norway where inclusion presents a greater peril for environmental social movements in civil society. This dual strategy will be further tested in the Philippine context which will be discussed in the next section.
The Philippine Experience of Environmentalism
The understanding of democracy proposed by Dryzek and his view on how it can be broadened and deepened through the social movements in civil society are helpful in grasping environmentalism and its influence in greater democratization. In several of his projects involving green politics, Dryzek outlines a few relevant insights that can also help us appreciate better the environmental movement here in the Philippines (Dryzek 1998, 2005). These insights include, among others, the pursuit of greater ecological modernization where some environmental concerns are incorporated in state imperative, thus creating a green state. Germany is the leading proponent of this model. But we have to take note that even Germany is still characterized by the presence of oppositional environmental groups that are responsible in making the country’s environmental policies democratically oriented. This insight, coupled with the earlier arguments on the limits of capitalist state, and the need for oppositional environmental groups, will be carefully weaved together using the context of the environmental movement in the Philippines.
At the outset, it has to be stressed that the Philippines has one of the most vibrant civil societies in the world, including groups that push for greater environmental movement (Holden and Jacobson 2007, 149). Moreover, it is interesting to note that while the Philippines is a developing country where democratic institutions are not yet stable, and where its environmental movement has to take into consideration equal if not greater concerns of poverty and access to resources, it has manifested some parallelism with developed democracies especially the role and impact of its environmental movement.
Parallel to the critique raised by Dryzek on the capitalist state, the environmental movement in the Philippines has also exposed the existing Philippine nation-state as limited in responding to environmental issues and concerns. While it is understandable that the government has to give importance to economic growth to respond to the problem of poverty, it has also failed to take into consideration issues on environmental threats which, if not properly managed, will have devastating effects. Its attitude is characterized as highly supportive of economic concerns, and tentatively if not almost benignly supportive of environmental issues. This is very much observable in the various environmental issues that have confronted the country, both nationally and locally. The Philippine government then typifies the problems that beset the liberal capitalist state for its lack of open attitude toward democratization.
A case in point is the issue on mining which, at the national level, has rendered the government hostage to the business industry long perceived as the pipeline of the country’s economy. Businessmen and corporations behind the mining industry have used the discourse on poverty alleviation and economic growth to legitimize the existence of mining even in key biodiversity areas. And yet mining has generated minimal revenue for the state. It has also caused a lot of environmental damage at the immediate and long term levels (Monsod 2012). The government’s priority on economic growth as a means to address poverty has been held captive by the dominant discourse of the mining industry that promotes mining as a response to the problem of poverty. This is manifested by the hesitant move of the present government to issue an Executive Order (EO) governing the mining industry, despite voluminous inputs from various civil society organizations and consultants, experts included (Villanueva 2012). After the issuance of EO 79 that attempts to synchronize mining activities in the Philippines, it was criticized mostly from the ranks of environmentalists not only because of its palliative measures but more so because it has privileged business and economic concerns over environmental impact. We can also add here the insistence of the previous government to stick to the Mining Act of 1995 (RA 7942) and the present government’s EO’s framing that is still anchored in that same problematic mining act (Tabora 2012).
It can be noted that the issue concerning mining—while most recently being highlighted in the media—has already been a long standing advocacy among environmental groups. In fact, even the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) has issued statements and has initiated actions both at the national and local level as early as 1996. Pastoral letters and mass mobilizations were strategies used by the church. The issuance of the EO 79 in 2012 can be considered as one of the major gains in the decades of resistance against state policies that are privileging the mining industry to the detriment of the environment. Parallel examples at the local level can be also cited. For one, there is a failure on the part of the Davao City government to significantly look into the potential effects of the coal-fired power plant proposed as solution to the threat of power crisis. Some of these effects would include, among others, air and water pollution, not to mention displacement of residents. The issue of power crisis is, of course, given more weight over the threat to life and environment because it can affect the business industry and, in the process, affect the local economy.
For another, there is the recent issue involving the Shrine Hills in Marina, still in Davao City. While the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB) and other geological experts have classified the place as unfit for further development that will involve construction of industrial and residential infrastructure, no significant position is gleaned from the local government both at the executive and legislative levels (Lacorte 2010). The suspicion is that significant influence of various developers (representing the business sectors) has made the local government hostage and blind to the impending threat this development plan poses to the immediate residents of Shrine Hills in particular, and to Davao City in general.
These accounts affirm Dryzek’s frame that the existing liberal capitalist system anchored in economic rationality can curtail greater democratization and, in the process, relegate environmental concerns to the margins. The government’s attitude on the mining industry at the national level, and the coal-fired power plant and the Shrine Hills development issues at the local level, has clearly manifested this structural and systemic problem. It can, with reason be said here, that the government has privileged business and economic concerns over environmental concerns.
The oppositional character of environmental groups in the Philippines is manifested by the existence of various advocates as early as 1979. Groups like HARIBON and the Philippine Federation for Environmental Concerns (FPEC) plus other local movements are a few examples of these groups (Magno 1993, 6). More recently, the Alyansta Tigil Mina is at the forefront of the more ecologically sound policies related to mining. Of course, there are local groups that are involved against the creation of a coal-fired power plant and the industrialization and commercialization of Shrine Hills.
The issue on mining, in particular, has mobilized various groups that include the academe, church, NGOs, and people’s organizations (POs) that are directly affected by it. -What is more interesting though is that members of civil society groups have found allies even among several members of the business sector. The best example is Ms. Gina Lopez who represents ABS-CBN, a top media conglomerate in the Philippines.
The responses of these groups include formal strategies like conducting conferences on mining, such as the ones organized by Ateneo de Davao University (Actub and Pilapil 2012) and Ateneo de Manila University, to name a few. This is coupled by the use of various media campaign blitz, courtesy of ABS-CBN’s anti-mining position as influenced by the high-profile advocacy of Lopez who heads the ABS-CBN Foundation. To be included as well are the various forms of lobbying done at the halls of congress for the passage of an Alternative Mining Bill or the Minerals Management Act to replace the problematic RA 7942. These are also ably supported by various protests both at the halls of congress and even at the headquarters of mining companies or the actual mining sites. We also have to include the pastoral letters released by the CBCP that condemn, in particular, the commercialization and materialism promoted by the mining industry (Holden and Jacobson 2007). All of these have exacted significant pressures on the government to issue an EO governing the mining industry. When it was finally released, it was however received with dismay by environmental groups and local communities, especially those directly affected by mining.
All the aforementioned responses of the various groups within civil society have typified the latter’s oppositional character. Although it may not be as radical as that of its counterparts’ in other countries, partly due to the Filipinos’s lesser inclination for direct confrontation, it is as equally vibrant as theirs. The feature and dynamism of this oppositional character affirm Dryzek’s position that indeed greater democratization is possible in the Philippines as evidenced by the convergence of various groups. The case of environmentalism here has also demonstrated that greater democratization can be achieved outside the peripheries of the state and into the domain of civil society. This supports further the understanding that the political arena should be extended beyond the state in order to broaden the democratic space. The environmental movement further concurs this point in that the response to the mining issue in particular has been wanting, and is in fact very limited within the apparatus of the state. Instead, it was pushed further by the pressure generated by civil society. It has to be affirmed as well that pressure is not only local and national; there is also a significant influence from among international groups like Green Peace that has aided in lobbying and broadening the discursive space and content.
The Philippine experience of environmentalism is quite unique. Because its democratic governance is weak as compared to its Western counterparts, and because corruption and lack of political consciousness among its citizens prevail, there is a greater challenge for collaborative effort to be forged between civil society and the government. This is in no way similar to inclusion referred to by Dryzek. Instead, it simply calls on the civil society groups especially those that are involved in environmental advocacy to also assist the government in strengthening its governance mechanism and in promoting greater democracy. Some of these strategies would include greater involvement among environmental groups in the crafting of laws and policies affecting the environment, as well as instituting some watchdog groups to check on the implementation of these laws, policies and projects at the local level. Lobbying for more environmentally oriented ministers to head environmentally related government agencies can also be suggested as one of the strategic courses of action here.
In view of this openness toward a collaborative strategy, it can be argued that the effectiveness of the environmental movement in the Philippines toward green oriented policies is propelled by a dual strategy. On the one hand, the oppositional public sphere is supported by environmentally oriented executives and legislators who push for environmental policies. This is partially valid for without the support of consultants and experts from within the cabinet, the push for an EO on mining would not have been realized. More so, the passage of the Alternative Mining Bill or the Minerals Management Act will only be realized through the dedicated support of able legislators who possess heightened environmental consciousness and commitment. On the other hand, there is the strategy of an empowered participation of civil society groups. The significant push from the oppositional groups within civil society has also been crucial in propelling the government to act on environmentally related concerns.
However, this dual strategy has to take into account some crucial issues. While it is true that there are allies of the state like executives and legislators, they are small in number. Given the inefficiency and corruption in the government and its lack of commitment and political will in responding to environmental issues, there is the possibility that no significant progress can be expected from its ranks unless it is constantly challenged by members of the civil society. Inclusion in the state by way of incorporation of socially oriented party list groups and socially oriented individuals could render them ineffective by way of getting them accustomed to the inefficient and unjust culture within the government itself (Magno 1993, 12). Furthermore, it has to be stressed that most of the cross-cutting and frontier initiatives that serve as responses to environmental threats usually emanate from the democratic, discursively updated civil society groups that enjoy the support of international network. This is not the same as the actions done by the government which are all too often slow in responding to hazards and threats, and dependent upon its civil society counterparts for initiatives.
Thus, the frontier toward greater democratization still hinges upon the oppositional character of civil society itself. This is notwithstanding the less than promising prospect for greater democratization in the incumbent Philippine government, coupled with the long process of making the state apparatus effective and efficient. Studies conducted on the relationship between civil society and the state have shown that the strength of the civil society in the Philippines, especially in pushing for policies ranging from labor issues to human rights violations, is one of the most vibrant (Ferrer 1997, 1-9). While there are strong suggestions for gaining greater familiarity with the mechanisms of governance governing civil society and in calling for further assistance to strengthen the national and local government (Lopez and Wui 1997, 1-20), we still cannot discount the fact that the oppositional role of civil society has been successful and has remained to be an effective strategy.
Conclusion
The capitalist state is embedded in a rationality that is liberal and individualistic made manifest in the liberal constitutional model. This system limits the achievement of more democratization, especially on issues related to the environment. As such, the potential for expanding the democratic space, as Dryzek suggests, has to be anchored instead in the oppositional public sphere of civil society as demonstrated by the social movements like environmentalism. As a social movement, environmentalism helps challenge the dominance of capitalism in our democratic systems. The greater push for policies involving responses to environmental problems are being championed by civil society groups that resist inclusion in the constitutional core of the state, without sacrificing their capacity for collaboration. The same situation is found in the Philippines. The environmental movement exerts pressures to create and re-create policies on mining and other issues concerning the environment. However, while a dual strategy might be an ideal way to proceed, there is still for the time being a need to capitalize on the power created by the oppositional character of the environmental movement and the pressure it exerts on the government.
Deradicalization and the Defeat of the Feminist Movement: The Case of the Philippines
Past paradigms associate radical politics with waging a revolution that is class-based, armed, thorough-going. In the Philippines this was represented by the communist-led nationalist democratic liberation movement of the previous decades. After the fall of the socialist regimes and the split of the local leftist movement in the early 1990s, radical politics has become anyone’s claim. The national democrats, for instance, are now judged by its critics as stuck in the past, reduced from vanguard to rear guard of radical politics (Weekley 2001, 259). This viewpoint goes with the current civil society movement that debunks statism and class struggle. On the other hand, staunch proponents of revolutionary change regard civil society engagement as reformist, a cooptation with neo-liberalism.
So much harder to speak on today is feminism. While many women identify with feminist thoughts and live out in their personal lives what could be construed as feminist practice, a greater number are reluctant to be identified with feminism. Others outrightly reject the label. This can be attributed to an absence of a cohesive mass movement that engages the support and interests of women and an attendant lack of feminist theorizing to inform everyday politics.
A difficult question to ask in discussing feminist politics in the Philippines is whether the feminists of the 1980s and early 1990s fought (and were defeated) as feminists or as the women contingent of the national democratic forces. This paper argues for the latter and reiterates that: There is no longer a feminist movement to enlist oneself to in the Philippines today. The feminist and proto-feminist consciousness of the 1980s has been superseded by other competing cultures and ideologies that invaded in the aftermath of the 1990s Upheaval. Those who choose to carry on a radical position stand to be extinguished.
Feminism and the National Democratic Struggle
Women organizing in the national democratic revolution had been the task of the Malayang Kilusan ng Bagong Kababaihan (MAKIBAKA – Independent Movement of New Women). From a Women’s Bureau of the Kabataang Makabayan (Patriotic Youth) in 1969, the national democratic organization’s women department grew into the MAKIBAKA in 1970, which later became the nationwide organization of women, mostly youth and students. In 1972 it changed its name to Makabayang Kilusan ng Bagong Kababaihan (Patriotic Movement of New Women) to emphasize the national democratic intent of the organization. During the Martial Law years MAKIBAKA activists were deployed all over the country to build a basic alliance of women across all sectors of society, specifically the workers, peasants and lower petty bourgeoisie to support the goals of the revolution. MAKIBAKA women became the progenitors of the national democratic feminism that always laid great stress on the need to unify. One of the oldest calls of this tradition is to combat wrong ideas that work against the solid unity of the oppressed class.
Many women writers trace the beginnings of the women’s movement in the Philippines to the anti-colonial struggle of 1890 when the revolutionary movement Katipunan produced heroes like Gregoria de Jesus, Teresa Magbanua, Melchora Aquino and Gabriela Silang (Pagaduan 1993, 106). While there had been various movements pushing for the advancement of women’s rights since 1891 when the right to vote was first waged by middle-class women, in contemporary time, the women’s movement was strongest from the mid-1980s to the beginning of the 1990s. Feminist critic Delia Aguilar (1993, 94) ascribed this to the declining influence of the Left, as well as the macho stance of the revolutionary movement at its height. At the time autonomous2 organizations were sprouting and GABRIELA, then claiming around a 100-member national federation of women-organizations, was leading the mobilizations of grassroots women and making national issues such as the U.S. bases, human rights, foreign debt, IMF-WB, etc. women’s issues. GABRIELA held sole claim to pursuing a “Third World feminism” that assigns gender oppression to problems of poverty and underdevelopment. Guided as it was by the national democratic project, GABRIELA sought to bridge head-on the inherently tense relations between women’s distinct concerns and pressing national interests (Aguilar 1993, 92).
As a federation of women organizations, GABRIELA has always been criticized as primarily a national democratic formation, rather than a feminist organization. As a movement, it had no autonomous agenda but anchored on the program of the national democrats. That GABRIELA’s mass organizations dispersed following the momentary demise of the national democratic agenda in 1993 must lend credence to this. While there were independent women’s movements that surfaced in the 1980s, these did not have GABRIELA’s number and mass character. These groups were easily dismissed by the national democrats as Western-influenced bourgeois feminist formations.
In the Philippines, women’s training in political struggles has always been in support of broader movements for freedom and democracy. The most intensive and extensive training they’ve had was in the national democratic struggle of the 1970s and 1980s. As enlistees to this cause, their first commitment was for the advancement of the revolution. As Aguilar asserts, “tied as it was to the orthodox Marxism guiding Party praxis,” feminism did not find a friendly home in the national democratic revolution (and in MAKIBAKA in particular) (Aguilar 1993, 92). The national democratic strut e of the previous decades always subordinated all other axes of oppression (gender, ethnicity, environment) to class strut: e. If a feminist consciousness did not fully develop in the women’s movement a good part of the blame can probably be laid on this continuing alliance with the male-dominated leadership of the national democratic movement (Angeles, cited in Aguilar 1993, 133).
Despite its hostility to feminism, the culture of radicalism fomented by the national democratic revolution brought on tremendous changes in the lives of people who were involved in struggle. Relationships were restructured as the needs of the revolution came first. Comradeship was replacing other bonds based on bourgeois institutions, and the nuclear-patriarchal family, although still regarded even by revolutionists as a site for reproduction (and women seen as bearers of sons who would carry on the struggle) was being complemented by the bigger family – the collective.; A proletarian worldview was being developed, denigrating middle-class values and institutions and condemning bourgeois consumerism and other MNC-friendly tendencies.
Retrenchments in the Camp: From Feminism to Genderism
The “post-revolutionary era” following the defeat of the national democratic program in the 1990s was a period of vigorous search for alternatives to past paradigms. While activists looked for “interstices and spaces within the political system to advance the progressive agenda” (FOPA 1993, 7), the Ramos government was hastening the country’s integration into the world market. Development aid poured into the country, a big bulk of which was re-channeled through non-government organizations. Activists were getting “new money” to do development work with and a whole new set of NGO jargon developed along with the new formations and relationships. With the passing into law of the Local Government Code of 1991, non-government organizations and people’s organizations were given more power in development policies. Gender projects likewise proliferated, redeploying feminist energies into new programs. This signaled the absorption of feminist-activists into aid agency structures.
With adequate support from funding agencies abroad, the women enterprise branched out into several directions: peace advocacy (gender and peace), eco-feminism (gender and environment), children’s rights, women spirituality, gender and micro-enterprise development, VAW (violence against women), and so on. This broadening of perspective worked two ways: it opened up more avenues to coalesce and work with other groups in important social issues; on the other hand, it further diffused if not finished off the unconsolidated feminist agenda.
This shift in political practice fell in line along the reform and renewal program being pursued by the broader progressive movement that now encouraged heterogeneity and pluralism (via participatory politics, legislation, community-based self-help projects, micro-enterprises, etc.) in development practice — in lieu of hegemonic social transformation projects. There was adequate financial support coming in this direction as traditional funding agencies were themselves reacting to what they felt to be a mistake they made in the past: backing up organizations that sought to destabilize government while incapable of responding to popular sentiments and not directly serving the socio-economic needs of the poor.
With no overarching national or class struggle to hem them in, women projects expanded, from women studies to socio-economic initiatives. Basic services likewise improved as more health centers, reproductive health clinics, and crisis centers were put up. Women desks, committees and GAD (gender and development)5 focal points were installed in both government and non-government offices – a landmark in the women’s struggle welcomed by many, but bothered some. Feminist critic Aguilar (1993, 94) expressed concern saying while it boded well for the women’s movement, it could also take an inauspicious turn of creating a (feminist) bureaucracy dependent on dole-outs from foreign sources.
As a strategy in development practice, the gender framework (also called the GAD framework) moves away from a feminist stance that challenges existing social relations (gender inequality, for one) to an accommodationist (gender) approach that tries to live within a given social order. A feminist approach is basically a political demand, while GAD is essentially an economic strategy which seeks to find relevance within the economic-development regime of the neo-liberalist era (1990s onward). In other words, GAD works within the interstices of the dominant capitalist system.
As what has been forwarded earlier, there is no longer a feminist movement in the Philippines. What we have now is a scattering of women’s causes and projects that serve women’s welfare without really hurting free-market and the neo-liberal regime on one hand, and male hegemony on the other hand. A real bane that many well-funded gender projects do is siphon off the political energies and resources of the women’s movement, contributing to a culture of indifference that is so hostile to radical politics.
In the branching out into multifarious gender interests, feminism thus becomes just one of the older twigs one need not hold on to. It is not surprising that not a few women activists now express queasiness over being called a “feminist,” others even preferring to call themselves “genderist.” Feminism is so associated with the confrontational politics of the 1980s and is seen as “anti-male,” ergo, has no place in a supposedly all-inclusive, enlightened, gender-sensitized civil society movement of the 1990s and 2000s.
Getting Rich on the Home Front?
The dismissal of the class struggle of the previous decades following the triumph of elite politics and the rise of the civil society movement in the 1990s likewise brought changes in the lifestyles of erstwhile proletarian practitioners. For one, the collective life withered away, as bourgeois institutions of old (the nuclear family, the conservative church, government) gained new ascendancy in the lives of former rebel-activists. For another, the pouring in of development money likewise created an NGO bureaucracy living under the employ of development aid, producing in turn a “new middle class” composed of activists formerly trained in the proletarian ethic of “simple living and hard struggle.” Joining them are young university graduates with varying political persuasions and vague ideas about previous social transformation projects.
The 1990s was also the time when people were trying to live down the upheaval of the previous decade. The anti-fascist struggle that claimed lives of family and friends; the discovery of the mass purges; all the aftermath of a failed revolution gave people a sense of disillusionment and a desire to withdraw from “bloody” political action. Self-transformation projects and spirituality quests, deemed to be what the last transformation project lacked, were drawing a number of ex-activists. There was also a sense among many ex-activists that the “post-conflict” climate (post-adversarial politics) might be their one opportunity to compensate for “lost time” to go back to a forsaken career, or to children and family. Guilt-tripped over past parental or filial neglect, the home gained new importance. Housing plans, educational plans, health insurance plans and car plans became “basics” as family life normalized. Under this arguably more peaceful and more affluent regime, a new (political) attitude has developed: one that attunes to, even embraces, capitalist modernity. Proletarian austerity is thus exiled, superseded by middle-class consumerism.
The Hegemony of the Family and Feminist Politics
In the Philippines, the family is decidedly a very powerful institution. The family is also the Catholic Right’s strongest argument against feminist politics. In its fight against Free Choice, for instance, it portrays the recently passed House Bill 4110 (Reproductive Health Care Act, which legalizes all forms of contraception, including post-abortion care) as the gravest threat in present time to the “sanctity of the Filipino family.” While “Third World feminism” has been always concerned with family welfare, reproductive rights and sexuality remain a thorny area that directly put it in direct collision course with the Church. The Catholic Right, in particular, shows great aversion to what it calls the “sexual revolution” ushered in by the invasion of Western products and information base via advances in telecommunications technology.
In the past, the Catholic Church had ironically been GABRIELAs moral ally, particularly in campaigns that had to do with sexual exploitation of women. Though each employed a different language,’ both the women groups and the Catholic Church are for the elimination of prostitution. The present dominance of the Catholic Right and the conservative view that looks at feminism or the idea of female independence as a toxic substance from the West has so much to do with present-day retreats and disavowals in the women’s front: There is no longer a coherent and strong voice — and a mass movement— to challenge misogyny and patriarchy. Besides, the broadening civil society movement draws forces from the multiplicity of voices from various social classes (that includes the religious and the middle-class based and conservative civic groups) that if one wanted to productively pursue advancement of equally worthy causes (e.g., anti-corporate, anti-globalization, peace, environmental protection, etc.), she has to be careful in treading the alliance ground. Feminism being a less attractive fight (since it also fights at home and fights men and bishops), some dissemblance and a little compliance had to be resorted to by practicing women advocates.
Conclusion
In the Philippines, a flowering of people’s initiatives and independent formations occurred following the crumbling of the once solid Left (due to strategic and tactical mistakes) that used to control and define the social transformation project. Abetted by a series of political reforms on the side of governments, e.g., decentralization with the enactment of the Local Government Code, and a system of representation that accommodated in Congress erstwhile state opponents and critics; the absorption of Left personalities in the Cabinet and strategic government agencies; and the pouring in of money in official development aid that has transferred billions of development money into the hands of non-government organizations; all combined to change the face of dissent, what is now called deradicalization. The defeat of adversarial radical politics in favor of an accommodationist, even cooptative, reformist politics. Taking place in an expanding job market and a flow of cheaper consumer goods (thanks both to trade liberalization), not to mention a climate of peace and greater “political freedom” (barring class politics) a better life seems to be “on sale.” The erstwhile activists (a good number of them, anyway), having left class politics and the trenches and having now joined the ranks of the middle class are inevitably trapped into reproducing a way of life that maintains middle-classness. Needless to say, they contribute to the creation of a neoconservative political climate.
For the feminist movement that always rallied behind the once national democratic cause, the defeat of the once Solid Left in the 1990s led to political disarticulation, disorganized the women forces, and demobilized them for a while. With the loss of the Left hegemony and with the emergence of pluralist politics (as encouraged by the State and adequately funded by Churches and governments abroad eager to sponsor political democratization and economic development in the country), new opportunities have been opened for their specific agenda to be heard. However, the sponsorship of gender by development organizations (and the concomitant resources allotted it), and its adoption by government (and the policies and laws enacted to support it) while helping to boost the women’s chances to be accommodated in the male structures of development discourse and processes, also co-opted them. Feminist dissent has been reined in – chastened and placated into complacency and compliance by the laws and institutions that are responsible for their subordination, in the first place. So that even as these women formations struggle to advance their gender interests, their own (feminist) energies get diffused in supposedly more encompassing projects: in the anti-corporate and anti-globalization movement; and in more “compassionate” projects (read as not anti-male): in the peace movement, in the gender and environment movement, in children’s rights, in welfare projects and socio-economic endeavors that do not carry a specifically feminist agenda. All these to reconcile women with, rather than question and challenge, traditional roles that spell their oppression. As feminist causes get institutionalized and the women’s movement relocated to the academe, government offices and other such safe places, adversarial politics and the equality project it seeks to install are demolished. For anyone who insists to stand by this oppositional politics, she stands to lose.
A Time for Reckoning for the Bangsamoro Struggle
Can we reverse the legitimacy deficit of an imported state by recognizing its renewed claim for legitimacy grounded on its role today as provider of security on its territory? Conventional diplomatic technique proves inept where nonstate actors carry out partly the security function or contest the right of the state to uphold and keep it. How did the Bangsamoro come to play, albeit partly, a security function within what is claimed to be Philippine territory?
To recognize diversity in the United States Institute for Peace (USIP) Philippine Facilitation Project is to draw a political matrix of diversities, wherein you rediscover that the Moros are still here to endure. The spirit of past and current generations is bound to the Moro homeland that was once a partner in covenant with the United States of America. In America’s dealings with the unincorporated territory of the Philippine Islands, the Moro Question constituted a major factor for Filipino full independence. This Question remains to be of interest today because it still puzzles political identity that attracts loyalties in domestic politics and in the articulations of spatiotemporal relations.
I take this liberty to articulate what we, the Bangsamoro people today, assert as a temporal depth embedded in territorial continuum between our present societies and our territorial ancestors. There is certainly nothing pre-modern in the recognition of kinships between current members of the nation and the members of those earlier societies that framed the context of homeland, ancestral domain, and territory as they relate the nation-a-forming to history. This introductory paper sketches certain nonlegal factors that engross our energies as stakeholders in mainland Mindanao and the Island Provinces of Basilan, Tawi-Tawi, and Sulu to focus on a twenty-first century solution to the Bangsamoro problem.
Yet it is a continuing educative process to stress the centrality of legal issues and empirical consideration. Quite a few commentators are likely to take our positions as classroom thoughts; yet many more will believe what is right in shaping public opinions and reactions. Serious grievances are still reckoned in the present reality on matters of governance (and issues dating as far back as when the Americans first encountered the Moros at turn of the last century). America imposed on the Moros a unitary state structure—exhibiting a condition of colonizibility—running in cycles of abolition of successive government agencies dealing with Muslim affairs. Originally conceived in rigidity of a policy of benevolent assimilation, it is in fact, a euphemistic language for democracy’s referent: Civilizing ends.
In the first place, fundamental institutions of political life (nation, state, government, citizenship) are justificatory concepts. A democratic conception of citizenship contributes to the sense of the nation as a political community. Related to this is the discovery of discourses (in writings, petitions, declaration of Moro leaders) contesting several assumptions where the foundation of earned sovereign authority resides. In doing so, the US discursive erasure of a unique Muslim polity signified in a historic Bangsamoro sovereign space was at odds with transforming nondemocratic states, but only for an interim period. Current USIP forum on Islam and democracy focuses on what is here and now But there is very little guidance about constitutional crisis where, for instance, the logic of representation breaks down and there arises a question of legitimacy. Most are lost perhaps on abstract idioms surrounding the conceptual ambiguity in clarifying international relations and the intertextual journey involved in analysis.
Understanding the causal sequence
There is much to recommend about the Philippines being a case of shuttered democracy — to use a catch phrase; and so it is. This trajectory of the republic complicates the understanding of the Filipino nation in history to stabilize the meaning of a republican state. There is nonetheless a historically unique appeal to USIP explanatory argument about the true amity and commerce between America and the Moros of the Sulu archipelago, Mindanao, and its adjacent islands including Palawan.
Dr. Jacob G. Schurman, Chairman of the First Philippine Commission, was the first American official to land in Sulu at the turn of the last century. Addressing the Yale Phi Beta Kappa Society once back in America, he proposed a scheme of governance adapted to “the southern tier of islands” resembling that one put in operation in the Malay peninsula. One can understand American intervention as a policy tool in organizing earned sovereignty. Schurman’s very own words is a good quote:
“Any one who has studied the wonderful history of the Malay archipelago will find his promise fulfilled. We can make agreements with the chieftains of the southern tier, by which we shall take charge of the custom houses, and they will accept advisors who will bring to bear upon them not the power of the sword, but the American sense of justice, the American sense of government, and capacity for ushering in prosperity.”
This entails looking back in search for democratic closure to the ambiguity that so much characterized later American reductive policy of regime change via domination/intervention dichotomy—without Moro plebiscitary consent—bearing upon their distinct domestic community. As to political correctness, the Bangsamoro people claim supremacy over the veto power of settlers in Mindanao that spawn a land grab politics of domination to spin further Moro peripheral status in their own homeland.
As USIP Executive Director Eugene Martin has often explained, our American-Moro relations started on two fronts: “One with the War Department and the other with the Peace Department.” To date, the USIP still faces an unfinished agenda that has become a conceptual point of reference. This is so because the causal sequence projected in official lines of Washington thinking reminds us at once that America is here again in Moro homeland in the aftermath of the war on terror. For who decides to associate jihad with terrorist bond? Of course, your mandate is at once clear: To help expedite the peace process in Mindanao. Arguing this, we know how peace matters:
1. Consider how recent media reports on USIP workshops on the Mindanao peace process that provide both educative and corrective learning curves for the media, military, and national police.
Almost all media story is about conflict. Thus contemporaneous temptations to report America’s involvement solely in terms of security interest that step up military actions against a radicalized Muslim group feeds on the lack of solid information and profiling, if not faulty intelligence. Prejudice and bias substitute for the absence of sufficient background materials to the Manila-centric media reporting of the Mindanao conflict. This brings about a cycle of political violence formulated in the military idiom of pacification complex that, in turn, is tied to defense spending devoid of institution building for a just peace. Meanwhile the technology of political control continues to erode humanitarian law and basic human rights.
2. Consider next continuing efforts to bring different USI 13 experts together that can yield a reasoned exercise of the virtue of civility in government peace talks plus lessons learned in conflict resolutions.
All deliberate negotiation has a framework. It is commendable that USIP’s initial facilitation program runs parallel to the ongoing formal peace negotiation between the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and the Government of the Philippines (GRP). By other means, the USIP has provided access to both Peace Panels and their Technical Working Groups (TWG) in preparing for research—as we call for new formulas to solve the problem of Bangsamoro people via negotiated political settlement of the Mindanao conflict. Demonstrably, the positions we describe here are predicated on an expectation that flexibility of parties to the ongoing peace process can lead by itself to a just and lasting negotiated comprehensive political solution.
3. Consider then how the interventionist component of USIP program elsewhere intersects between the complexity and the compatibility of Islam and democracy, which diverts the conflict to the outside.
Archaic limits on sovereignty do not accord with recent events in the interstices of democracy. Mindanao is linked as a frontier combining foreign policy rhetoric with justification for global antiterrorism measures to apply state coercive diplomacy. State practice of security creates identity by otherness and enmity. Warmongering faculty of the Presidency and Cabinet opens up the old antagonisms that put into precarious condition the Christian Filipino capability to govern the Bangsamoro people. But they cannot admit to harboring Islamophobia. With the continuing significance of Islam as a factor in such circumstances, the task of making this world endure for democracy becomes complicated, unless complemented by traditional alternative dispute resolution.
4. Consider finally a new doctrine for USIP to help shape the practice of ad hoc intervention at certain diplomatic stage to determine the permanent status of the Bangsamoro territory not as a legal question but as a political solution.
Current political trusteeship is a pragmatic template traced to the mandate system. From being a United States unincorporated territory, the evolution of the Philippine Islands under American political tutelage into a postcolonial transition Commonwealth was designed to determine Filipino future status. Thus defined, the Wilsonian telos of political development is institutionalized democracy. If we follow the fundamental rules of statecraft, Moros were de facto characterized by treaty-based rights and not by status as minority sector or by any class affiliation. From this point on, whatever is uncertain about the Moro’s prior claims now remains a stimulus likely to create de hure prospects for current transitional mechanisms to approach sovereignty-based conflict resolutions.
5. Consider at last a need to achieve the “Peace Department” role for USIP to mobilize international support even from a skeptical start to a high degree of outside proactive peacemaking initiatives translated into legitimacy.
Balancing between self-determination and sovereignty is the optimal method of ending conflicts. It is a hallmark of both international and internal legitimacy. It may well be that a coherent system of ad hoc intervention lurks around internal legitimacy for associative arrangements representing the premise of political stewardship in the preparation for the referendum that must decide the Bangsmoro permanent status. The South Sudan formula illustrates this Unity-with-Option modality as a result of workable arrangement under the Machakos Protocol. Its dominant considerations match those modern prescriptions for successful political trusteeship.
The specificity with which to exercise that Option of the Bangsamoro people, at least in part, is a legal in part, is a legal concept. At the end point of the political process, the case for Mindanao exhibits overlapping criteria for international and internal legitimacy; not only in terms of prior Protocol between European nations, but also at the level of signification resulting from its claimed territoriality. This is, in international context, the Sulu dynastic state was status quo ante assured special status as a protectorate by treaty; whereas, the Magindanaw dynastic state was a proto-state model of bounded territorial community of custom (suzerainty) and law with an interpretative overlay from customary international norms. Given the actuality transformed into the political culture that was consolidating into polity-centered versions of rulership.
Quests for convergence of the nonlegal factors facilitate understanding of the MILF-GRP peace Talks and the negotiation frameworks for future configurations in Mindanao. Subjection/integration, assimilation/aspiration, autonomy, and association: Such are the old grids to govern colonies. By this, political arguments for the Philippine Commonwealth cast the Moro polity/society as the problematic actor. For all its truncated evolution, there was a period of deep agitation in that this Government found itself face to face with the separatist Moro leaders and movements. The status quo in Mindanao has remained unacceptable and the unabetted armed conflict could be described as a stalemate for a number of good reasons. It just might be that new directions suitably related to the natural political patterns and social forces in Mindanao could channel less than formalistic (e.g., American style) models of democracy.
Materials generated from workshops, focus group discussions, and for a, writeups and analyses, such as those of peace researchers of USIP, have contributed to the understanding of the peace process. Advocacies have become added features of transparency about the progress of MILF-GRP peace negotiation. Understanding being always partial, we have become another casual sequence in the Government of Japan’s decision to dispatch a development expert to the International Monitoring Team (IMT), along with the Japanese new initiatives in regard to the Mindanao Peace Process. The Malaysian-led IMT — including Brunei and Libya — have performed the ceasefire monitoring task since July 2003, whereas the Japanese development expert can now begin to play a lead role in socioecomic monitoring.
Confronting reality in Mindanao
The centrality of the Bangsamoro homeland is intertwined with Bangsamoro identity as well as communal relationship to the land, the sea or lake, and the rest of the surrounding ancestral domains. With political ideology, asabiya or group pride may signify formally entering the world’s political life no longer via the backdoor, so to speak. It is this core value of holding on to their homeland that territorial claim is seen as central to the MILF diplomatic move for a negotiated political settlement.
Entrenching political structures and institutions
In sum, all outstanding commitments emanating from proper agreements are entrenching commitments to the incremental common denominator of permanent status. A time for reckoning commitment is upon us at this phase, as we take stock and more forward in the task of politics and diplomatic initiatives focused on self-determination. From 1997 to 2006, the GRP and MILF signed sixty-three agreements on various issues and concerns. Through the Government of Malaysia’s facilitation, the MILF-GRP Peace Panels have reached twenty-five Consensus Points weaving together all four strands of Ancestral Domain: conceptual foundation, territory, governance, and resources. Negotiations to resolve sovereignty-based conflict are unlikely to succeed without third party mediations where the centrality of the state as an important player in international relations is challenged. Third party mediation that prods the parties towards peace confidence building has impelled minimal transparency. Joint advocacies at this diplomatic state that promote popular confidence and leadership capacity for aggregating interests have entered another level of awareness. Typically, transparency here is aimed to reduce the domestic level of public confusion that comes with change. In summation, I have presented the salient points:
1. Clearly define what the struggle is about.
The Bangsamoro struggle does not make the Filipino people at large the real enemy. Nevertheless, on a nationalist level, the historicity of ethnic assertions is irrelevant. What is our perception of the condition of colonizibility in Mindanao? With its colony of migrants/settlers, the Central Government acts as a de-nationalizing authority, stripping off and denying Moros their Bangsamoro identity. Fundamentally, it is their birthright to secure their identity and posterity. To entrench the Bangsamoro homeland as a territorial space, with freedom of choice for indigenous peoples, does shape identity. Without a governing base, the issue of indigenous claims is stillborn and simply belongs to the sphere of ancestral vernacularism.
The Bangsamoro people’s struggle emanates from their identity claims and collective interests. This results from the movement for recognition of core ethnies and the role that mass mobilization by the intelligentsia plays in our people’s struggle. The Bangsamoro vertical variant includes ethnies stranded between tradition and modernity who seek to resolve their own identity crises by reasserting the history and culture of their community. Divergent experience of the hispanized population does much to explain that Filipino nationality mingled with the creole elites who sought a separate collective destiny. The rest of the nation was transformed from vertical patterns of ethnies led by the intelligentsia who leapt over colonization to rediscover their ethnic heritage. Once we focus on the asymmetrical degree of interdependence, the question of vexed citizenship related to ancestral domain issues becomes relevant.
Coercion in the service of political objectives is a limited means because it does not truly relocate final authority to end in closure of grievances. Most importantly, any military adventurism is also political. Armed struggle is an extension of the means to redress serious and legitimate grievances; MILF military actions are not aimed at the country as a whole. Devolved function extending a type of internal security arrangement whereby the Bangsamoro juridical entity (BJE) is able to apply its own policies within the broad constraints of a basic law, and still be able to exercise its authority and prerogative within its jurisdiction, can take a range of forms.
2. Firmly proffer a new modality to end conflicts.
Modality to accord an organically functioning BJ E with entrenched rights to exercise sovereign authority shared with the central authority is a step agreed to establish a system of life and governance suitable and acceptable to the Bangsamoro people. There is consensus on this point. Convening of constitutional framers tasked to write the basic law of the BJE, the modalities of which is to be contained in the comprehensive compact, is a logical step; but the content will emerge only from final status negotiation. Until restored to the Bangsamoro people, conflict-affected areas (CAAs) are undeniable reminders of unjust displacement and dispossession. But where restoration is no long possible, Government must take measures for adequate reparation. There is consensus on this, too. As a conceptual referent, CAAs are factored into development work and human security in Mindanao related to the Bangsamoro Development Agency (BDA). Consensus is now arrived at to enter provisional arrangements to establish constructive structures and associative relationships that realign the core areas of autonomy, expanding it for this purpose, to resolve outstanding claims over the CA As. The purpose is to delimit and delineate the territorial boundary lines marking the new zone of separation. Reasonably sustaining wealth creation is a function of ownership/ control of all natural wealth and resources of whatever kind which, under the jurisdiction of the BJE, can be subjects of sharing through economic cooperation agreement or arrangement. This is correlative to transfer of power provisions on financial control and revenue collection and the authority to create its own tax base, rates, and customs duties.
3. Clearly define criteria for transfer power provisions.
Associative arrangements to be embodied in a comprehensive compact establish the structure of governance with defined executive, legislative, and judicial powers and functions. Entrenchment empowers BJE to legislate and administer revenue-generating measures through taxation, public borrowings (foreign and domestic), licensing, and income from government investment. The consensus is arrived at without details.
Besides taxing powers, authority granted to BJE includes financial control for governmental accounting and auditing systems and standards suitable to BJE. Transfer of powers also provides for budgeting and allocation of funds for governmental functions, development, and public services. Effectiveness in delivery of basic government services to create an economic environment of prosperity is a concrete means to attain legitimacy. There is a consensus on this point.
Typical areas maintained for institution building are civil service, electoral, financial and banking, education, legislation, legal, economic, police and internal security force, judicial system, and correctional institutions all necessary for developing a progressive Bangsamoro society. Judicial review mechanisms can exist in separations institutions to leave room for Shariah-based courts and banking system.
4. Closely navigate with a timeframe for transition process.
The transitory provision for establishing institution simultaneous with the transfer of governance to the BJE—prior to the determination of the final political status—is the mechanism for entrenchment. The transition period has the defined function to the framework agreements. The transition period officially ends with the proclamation of the referendum results from an electoral exercise internationally monitored by a third party. There is consensus on this procedural step.
By joint understanding, the term entrenchment means, for the purposes of giving effect to the transitory provision, the creation of a process of institution building to exercise shared sovereign authority over territory and defined functions of associative character prior to the determination of final status.
In order to reach the appropriate transitional mechanisms and other modalities for governance, the procedural steps include options, transitory process, sequence, and time periods ended by the referendum results. There has to be popular consultation leading to a referendum as the mode to determine the future political status of the Bangsamoro people. The mechanism is to be embodied in the comprehensive -compact, and it is conducted at the end of the transition process.
A multinational third party is envisioned to monitor the actual implementation of the comprehensive compact and to supervise the review of the transitory mechanism to introduce and support changes. This will provide continuity for the IMT now in place in Mindanao. There is consensus on this unarmed and consensual type of preventive peacekeeping model.
Defining structures and triggers for devolution
The optimal method for legitimacy bid under the republican state and the international community implicates each other as opposing domains of political reality that corresponds to the dual face of sovereignty. Thus, preparation of the domestic population for self-government was conveyed to all Mandates. That mandate earned sovereignty that, as such, will survive and vest legitimacy upon the new state. The mandatory control of Mindanao seemed relative only to status issues that have developed between a regional entity without autonomy and the nation-state in question. But manipulative corruptions in Manila have adverse distributional effects due to blurring of levels of analysis of the Bangsamoro problem. It is for this reason that the MNLF modality of power sharing combined with autonomy has lost credibility. Regionalism provides only autonomy: Without forms of power sharing, it is less integrative and somewhat federative. It may at best have a quasi-constitutional ground. In contrast, the MILF envisions the BJE to be entrenched in a comprehensive compact right from the start.
My advocacy to establish foundational criteria reconfigured in diplomatic practices is articulated to bring about an ingenuous solution. Foreign policy and domestic politics have become difficult to disentangle because of the transocial relations of the Muslim community. The Mindanao conflict needs a closure, but what it cannot foreclose is the democratic right of the Bangsamoro people to determine their future political status ending in referendum results. Conversely, the closure of the conflict should and must end eventually in popular consultation process provided for by international law.
1. Organic bonds within the community.
The involvement of the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) in the MILF-GRP Peace Process implies the OIC’s formal recognition of the MILF’s claim to representation of the Muslim South of the Philippines. It is tolerable to ask if there is a real stable identity to the Bangsamoro people; for this identity is not repressed or concealed. Because it can be decided as to who is included and who is excluded or given a choice, the MILF-GRP Peace Panels adopted identity as an animating principle behind consensus points on governance strand of the Ancestral Domain agenda. This acknowledgement corresponds to the criterion of organic bonds within the community claiming it, relating to common historical, cultural, religious, or ethnic ties.
MILF outlook and assertiveness advance ethos of sharing autochthonous claims or grievances to assert conceptual precendents. But as a party to the negotiation, its peace panel puts forward cogent arguments, it listens inasmuch as it accepts demonstrably reasonable outcome.
It is clear how well the coordination is working. The BDA has actively cooperated with the World Bank-Multidonor Joint Needs Assessments (WB-JNA). Giving prority to the economic sector is now boosted with the formal decision of a Japanese agency to join the IMT in a nonmilitary capacity with the military and armed forces via the Coordinating Committee on Cessation of Hostilities (CCCH) and Ad Hoc Joint Action Group (AHJAG), the MNLF leadership has answered to calls of removing threats to communities and building confidence to lend legitimacy to the peace process.
2. Develop understanding of legitimacy.
When it comes to the plea for republicanism, democracy, and minority rights, modernity marks the conception, of citizenship among diverse societies via concrete participation. Mandated benchmarks are both necessary and essential for preparatory work on final status negotiations. International law provides various criteria for exercising attributes of sovereignty over a territory even for only an interim period. If a community desires statehood, as some commentators point out, the idea of a pre existing unity may be avoided in nationalist ideology precisely via the social construction of the single most important critetrion of nationality, i.e., shared national grievance.
There lies the crux of the age-old Moro problem that is embarrassing the Philippine state, whose own identity is the historical product of a communal wish to enjoy a sovereign status on the basis of an assertion of constitutional independence. Just as this vision of Filipino nationalism problematizes social relations linked to its colonial legacy, it also produces form during armed conflict with the military. Security is tied to the nationalist identity, but not until people., rather than citizens, are the primary subjects of security can a comprehensive peace compact be achieved.
This key point is, in turn, linked to specific cultural pretensions of the interest of its demos, embedded in the protocols or exclusionary practices signifies as nation-a-forming (domestic citizenry) and popular sovereignty (plebiscitary consent). What reinforces distinction between people and citizenry is statist identity that constructs citizenship as synonymous with loyalty to eliminate all of that which is foreign. Underscoring protection against outside military threats delegitimizes all claims to authority of the sort made in behalf of territories and peoples with non-western cultural traditions.
Does it matter today that the incorporation of Moro territories into the Philippines has not been about modernizing efforts through benevolent assimilation? Nor has it come at the price of tutelage of truncated promise of institutional reforms? A compromised sovereignty emerged out of the balances of foreign interest in the writing of Treaties and Protocols relating to Sulu, Palawan, Mindanao, and its adjacent islands. There was no way for the Moro polities to embed the stategic values of their territory into the Western Great Power games. Practicalities of a new era demand asymmetrical modality for the Bangsamoro people to determine the nature of their own belonging with impulses for non-centralization.
3. Reconcile authority with self-determination principles.
There are principles of self-determination and human rights international instruments involved in the MILF-GRP framework documents. Human security concerns are written into the Implementing Guidelines of Security and Rehabilitation Aspects of the MILF GRP. Adherence to Protocols 2 and 3 for the protection of combatants and noncombatants and the role of the International Committee of Red Cross (ICRC) in the year of 2000 figured out. IMT overlaps the internal/external margins as it performs its function.
Yet it behooves now on the part of the Philippine Republic to do better — to boldly tackle the fault lines at the borders with its own just sense of duty and fairness — where the US failed in the American sense of justice, sense of government, and sense of capacity to usher in prosperity. But can America still rectify it? By voluntarily agreeing to a bilateral territorial consent to demarcate Bangsamoro territory, the Government of the Philippines could show its flexibility and, if the population desires to form a BJE in associative ties with the republic, should establish legitimate core requirements thereof.
Should the MILF-GRP successfully negotiate a political settlement of the Mindanao conflict, it can establish subjective legitimacy to the BJE via comprehensive compact with the central juridical authority. By the practices of earned sovereignty, MILF precisely proffers incremental gains of past agreements—treaty-based rights and criteria of subjective legitimacy presently entrenched for institution building. The right of the Bangsamoro people to determine their future political status, with option defined in transition mechanisms, sequences, and time periods ending in the referendum results, is based on popular process as source of claim to statehood.
Ideation of quest for homeland
Shared beliefs in freedom and aspirations for self-determination are powerful abstractions. Given the temporal depth of claims/ conflicts, we do not take for granted the western duality of freedom and the necessity of war. Rather, it is the promise of just peace, more than the exploitation of antagonism, that anticipates progress in the political world. Formidable hardships are faced when arguments arc made to support claims concerning the gradual emergence of the idea of sovereign will on what is required.
A good start is the word combination “homeland” that conveys a bounded yet extensive territory. The recourse to the idioms “motherland” or “founding fathers” embodies that ideation of who has sovereignty. Apart from the rightness or wrongness of this historical claim of what we have as a foundational status are configured mixtures of partly actualized historical order or similar undefined entities. Sovereign will signifies the start of political struggle, not the site of the foundational entity; thus, the transitory process has the defined function to stabilize earned sovereignty so provisional statehood or conditional sovereign authority can be signified on ground. Still it recurs—arguably in various forms at diverse spatial and temporal locales—as protocols become established for governing relationships. Because our modern conception of sovereignty has space as the most important dimension, so space and territory are always tied up together. We advocate, however, that it is plausible to conceive of a deterritorialized spatial solution as conditional. Portraying this deferment of domestic community’s essential project for rational national unity opens critical space for rearticulating the modern political organizing principle of sovereign statehood.
Writing in this manner, my purpose is merely to trace the changing functions of sovereign will and to defer its understanding in favor of genuine or serious questions of enmity and amity played out in diplomatic circles. As it is, for the Bangsamoro people’s struggle, when policy becomes foreign, what is alien to the nation state? Much has been made of the novelty of the Philippine setting in regard to negotiating the gradual transference to sovereign statehood with reversion of alien sovereignty implicating both military basing and parity rights. It still generates controversies—as in the case of the Balikatan exercises’ in Basilan, Cotabato, and Sulu—that puzzle the peasantry.
As our communities become identifiably distinct from the real government, what we end up with is a disjunctive sign of sovereign (political) authority relative to arrangement of associative ties and tiers for internal legitimacy. Unsettled are questions of what the range of authority of a domestic community might be in practice. So far, no standards derived from global autonomy arrangements are aggregated into a single international covenant. Nevertheless, a range of intermediate statuses associated with provisional statehood via earned or phased recognition is evolving. By this route, we confront earned sovereignty as a constitutive principle. It is viable in bringing closure to the Mindanao conflict that is currently so tangled with interactive dynamics of a territorial state and nonstate practices that contest the foundations of sovereign authority.
I hope to redirect analysis and scholarship to look at our new approach to sovereignty-based conflict settlement: To view its modality not as an erosion of a territorially bounded entity, but an indication that statecraft is not primarily about relations between the sovereign state, but also relative to the governance of its component units. To document how that entity is in the process of emerging or changing in its capabilities for full juridical autonomy on the international scene, we examine the plausible transformation of its constitutive elements.
Interrogating the Philippine State
It is erroneous to confuse legitimacy with justice. Interrogating the Philippine state makes possible inquiring into the justness of the original position pertaining to the stately foundation of authority. The struggles to establish and displace the sovereign foundations of the monarchical order follow the evolution of the shift of the locus of sovereign authority from the ruler to the people represented at the Malolos Congress. Who is or was represented? Too easily is it taken for granted that those represented equated the nation.
Competing perceptions of history and current reality would likely undermine the MILF-GRP Peace Talks without skillful facilitation that allows all options to be on the table. I take the position that prior to the American intervention, location of sovereign authority was the Spanish monarch from whom all powers originated governing the Philippine Islands as a colonial possession. It was just that the foundational authority figure for the most part of Mindanao (except the northern portion) and its adjacent islands and the Sulu archipelago, including Palawan, were the rulers of the dynastic realms of Magindanaw, Sulu, and Ranaw.
Success in pursuing self-determination requires peace researchers political sophistication in drawing from the unique features of local political experience. Thinking through the mixtures of colonial policy tools and goals, we must cut deeper into the abstract idiom that underlies current political ideas and structures. My principal concern is to offer something emancipatory beyond an explanatory account of the Philippine state.
Context of integration under subjection
First, justification for control of territory by Spanish conquest and American colonization defined the understanding about the workings of power to exploit resources. The notion of temporary rule for the benefit of the people projected the idea that to be sovereign is to be fully developed upon subjection. To what end? The integration model is only a limiting case of the general theory. The conclusion that the Moros were in some sense uncivilized and thus seem to have no locatable sovereign is itself contested. In practical reality, America disregarded the Moro political aspiration when it established itself as the occupying protectorate. A priori arguments prevailed that Moroism exists in Mindanao and its adjacent islands, constituting another power on land founded on interdiction and law. On its logic are tangled public confidence, practical indicia concerning the dual context of political violence, protracting armed struggle in the service of political objectives, authority figures, and the rise of extremist groups at the border areas.
Why are there separate states? Is it the case then that they represent the distribution of the world into nations? Or is it just that brutal and arbitrary means characterize how the state has been constituted? Shift in the basis for the locus of power and authority now makes it possible to deconstruct that foundation of the political system that organizes law enforcement.”) What the late MILF Chairman Salamat Hashim appealed, in a letter in 2003 to US President George W. Bush, is about rectifying a historical error in US policy of incorporating the Moro polity into the Philippine polity. This recourse to a friendly Great Power is, for the MILF, to signify the legal framework and peaceful means of good offices. The reply of Assistant Secretary of State James A. Kelley to Salamat is clear about the US recognizing that the Muslims of the Southern Philippines “have serious, legitimate grievances.” The US will not mediate nor will it participate in the negotiations directly; yet it stands ready to support, both politically and financially, a both-if We peace process between GRP and MILF. Kelley assured that the US “will not seek to supplant Kuala Lumpur.” Indeed, the US seeks to work with the Malaysians for a successful peace settlement. In fact, the State Department has tasked the USIP instead “to further” the peace process.
Our inquiry into the limit of the political world harks back to the theory and practice of proto-sovereignty when the problem of piracy was confronted systematically because it represented a test case of the extent of sovereign authority and autonomy. To us, in modernity, outlawry is a public declaration: Thus, to account for the reconceptualization of negative, reactive, and immanent power of civil interdiction operatively substituting for police power in hot pursuit by ad hoc joint action group against criminal syndicates is to reconsider the sovereignty/intervention boundary. On a positive note, the track of MILF-GRP Peace Talks promises to be the linchpin of the broader Mindanao peace process: The legitimate fight in defense against terrorism. Taking these pointers together may reflect public willingness to accept questionable features of political control for satisfying needs, albeit it often blurs the difference between domination and liberation.
Aspirational context of assimilation
Second, even as American benevolent assimilation offered the dependent peoples a prolongation of the parent state, it was aspirational for the metropolis and elite Filipinos. If a republican state warranted popular sovereignty characterized by the making of majority/minority, the appeal to equality and inalienable rights are ultimately traced to American tradition and Hispanic Catholic heritage. Via political aspirations, worldviews, value claims, transformations, and so on, the stepwise interventions take place to organize equivalent liberal capitalist democracy. This project of universalizing the liberal movement from below neglects its troubled relationship to time dimension.
Thus, invasion discourses on manifest destiny of the American people to establish the boundaries of the nation from the Atlantic to the Pacific pointed to who are the people in the Philippines. To obscure manifold differences, the international had to be assimilated and turned into a domestic entity in order to guarantee legitimacy, with the people as the referent. Controversy has raged on, as in episodic events, because self-evident truths are negated in recent sovereign remedies for complicity to questions of legitimacy.”
The compelling effect of this story opens up how Mindanao had a predominantly Muslim population whose serious grievances and frustrations with the status quo boiled up in 1968, culminating in the Muslim Independence Manifesto (MIM). Continued loss of Muslim superiority and dominance in Mindanao is a critical factor to the pursuits of occupation dependent upon the generative power of the earth, the control of land area, and the use of resources. Continuity of demands clustered around agenda for MILF-GRP negotiation resonates with modern criteria to garner consensus’ inclusive of the indigenous people.
Context of crisis in autonomy
The autonomy envisaged in the MNLF-GRP Final Peace Agreement of 1996 has come half a century after the inauguration of Philippine independence in 1946.13 Arguing for an emancipatory framework of political space, it poses helpful dichotomies for the Moros as distinct, separate politics.
And it has conditioned, too, the limit of ideological silence pertaining to the abstract entity of representation of the Philippine body politic in its foundational status. The natural logic of episodic events of EDSA 1 and EDSA 2 reinforces the power of the basic argument of the article: the full autonomy of the juridical entity is in crisis.
1. The formative union of state and nation.
Now we can presuppose that the return of the body politic—union of state and nation—as the metaphor of full juridical autonomy creates a mutually reifying effect on the more abstract and transcendent concept of territorial status. A nd so, I suggest that understanding the republican state to give impetus to the geographical orientation of political control inhibits reorganizing reality of demos actors’ plea for revolution at the capital region. This underlines all the more that the regularity of election is the essence of republicanism.
As borne out during the term of Fidel V. Ramos, progress in the NINLF-GRP negotiated settlement required a re-evaluation of parameter problems and international monitoring mechanisms. From its incipience, this process was eroded by internal political dynamics and troublesome unilateral interpretative constitutional process for obtaining plebiscitary consent. There is thus, on one spectrum, a challenge to the Macapagal-Arroyo presidency to configure by any conceivable good faith the application of the standards implementation phases through the remainder of her term. On the other spectrum, the MILT-GRP negotiation issues deserve a mixture of lessons learned as grid of peace process. Central authority can very easily eliminate the condition of colonizibility via earned sovereignty formulation, according to the set of hallmarks for permanent and final status negotiation.
2. The contested claims for authority and freedom.
Martial rule during the 1970s was an alibi governance structure acting to preserve the sovereign foundation of the republic , thereby saving it from dismemberment. The protection of interest is not a theory: Its analysis turns on a political acumen to deal with concrete problems. Justifications to use state coercive power have taken in the name of authority. For Marcos, a theory of revolution from the center was necessary to arrest the fragmentation of practical political authority. Authority is what official claims invoked when the Jabidda plot and massacres of Moros in genocidal proportions occurred and Muslim dominated provinces were gerrymandered. The worsening armed conflict in Mindanao from 1972 onward invited OIC member countries to intervene. And the subsequent 2000 wars of presidential ambitions demonstrated how bad governance and political violence result in an unstable status quo. Government effectiveness is a core tenet in international and internal legitimacy, which precisely deals with power and leadership.
Considerations of the 1976 Tripoli Agreement by now are intertwined with the 1973 Constitution, 1986 Freedom Constitution, and the 1987 Constitution. Parameter difficulties must be broadly settled to negotiate the crucial concepts: Autonomy, independence, and freedom. How can claims to the final status of the Bangasamoro people be determined by an open political culture that shifts with the assumption of a single logic to account for them? a popularly elected government is not enough to recast the distinction between two key concepts: Government and people. It is not sufficient because the Constitution is too narrow a framework to negotiate the Mindanao conflict and the problem of the Bangsamoro people. Neither is it genuine enough to invoke the limitedness of the constitutional process. In this context, the autonomous regions covered by autonomy-specific provisions of the 1987 Constitution do not encompass self-determination in regard to the associative claims of authority, self-rule, and freedom.
Emerging context of association
The concept of territorality is hardly investigated in international relations. Even changes in the European Union and global economy move beyond state sovereignty and territoriality towards overlapping authorities and non-territorial offshore markets. It the first place, international relations theory is not adept at problematizing the discontinuity in the state system to yield to instances of configuring political space. There is no search for entities substitutable for the state; what takes place is the unbundling of territoriality.
Yet, from another angle, the practice of ad hoc intervention does short shrift the doctrine of free state association. For political effect, association allows a degree of self-governance with delegation of power. Post-colonial transition type is practically replaced by intervention for political trusteeship or earned sovereignty approach following the official end of UN trusteeship system. Given this reality, however conditional or grudgingly ceded, a portion of the juridical autonomy of the parent state produces particular competencies. Meantime, trying to sort out why former colonial states vary points our analysis back to their different foundations of sovereign authority. Very few states have actually possessed full juridical autonomy — the Philippines among others — and thus might be characterized as quasi-sovereign states. And while no stable “domestic community within clear, fixed boundaries” can be located, it has become analogous in historical event to speak of failed states.
1. The argument for foundational status.
Treating seriously Philippines sovereignty as a question already settled poses a challenge to reconstruct of deconstruct its foundational status. Take the notion of sovereign voice of authority: Philippine quasi-sovereign state status permitted it to be a founding member of the United nations (UN) now enjoying a nonpermanent seat in the UN Security Council. Within the state system, its membership in the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) denoted sovereign statehood. In addition to this spatial dimension, the Philippine entity’s full juridical autonomy and political identity can be inferred from diplomatic practice in current global political life.
Having attained some measure of legitimacy, how does the OIC observer status of Bangsamoro represented by MNLF implicate the intersections of politicized discourses between GRP and the intervening states? By this means of state behavior, the OIC resolutions discursively convey to GRP the concerns over the situation in Mindanao and Sulu; even if changes in the conduct of the state occur, we can detect the transitory character of the nexus of relationships of entities. More importantly, the OIC member states act as the legitimate interpretative community regarding Muslims in the South Philippines. Arguably, legitimacy should not be confused with justice. Although it means no more than agreeing to seek working arrangements via the permissible aims and methods of foreign policy, it implies tacit acceptance of international modes and standards of procedural steps in peace negotiation.
As for the MILF-GRP Peace Talks, the Government of Malaysia as facilitator allows the parties to work out the terms of reference as a necessary part of the framework. The exploratory talks break the structure of discussions into components of negotiation for the acceptance part and serves more for the negotiation of obstacles while tackling the substantive issues. The content part is more concerned with results rather than methods. The primary requirements of the procedure are confidentiality and informality. Owing to the political sensitivity of the facilitation as a process, the parties and the facilitator are often reluctant to place on record, except in fairly general terms, all the details and nuances of the procedural steps they went through. It should be noted that this largely explains the fact that even post factum the Secretariat-Facilitator, the GRP, and the MNLF have limited the access of the press.
2. The argument for conceptual adjustment.
Why negotiate and who are represented? It is a mistake to say that the theory of nationality is a retrograde step in history. This nationalist myth represents a break with the past, even as it casts it. Filipino nationalism aims at unification, but lacks the criterion of sharing grievances with the Bangsamoro people. Constitutive unity, when self-determination becomes associated with popular sovereignty, is attached to supposed nationhood; and what we call majority has the tendencies for discriminatory bias. Pressure from this question creates an urge in separatist movements specifically tested on autonomy precedents attuned to the nuanced minority rights standards of equal protection of law, just like in mature nation-states where distinct national groups live under the same democracy. More to the point, homogenizing notions of democratic citizenship illustrate the need to revise some of the unitary statist sovereign entity assumptions in public and constitutional spheres of equality of all peoples.
Concerning the facts about the formation of a monist polity into single-nation Filipino state, this Catholic country’s unitary purpose invites abuse of authority and oppressive rule, despite certain claims of tolerance for diversity. The interest of the Bangsamoro people will only be part of it, but they will never be in it because they are not of it. Some of the secular ideological constructs basic to the aspiration toward Filipino nationalism itself would rather treat Moros as minorities, in the context of tribe or sector. In fact, as self-determined communities, they are not effectively governed, thereby rendering the nationalist ideals remote. Who does this republic satisfy when it tries to produce a general plenty and wealth-acquisition via rent-seeking capital center where the power of the regional institutions is largely marginal? How to make sense of the status of the political economy so dependent on division of labor forces generative of overall wealth overseas—a situation that further suggests the ambiguities surrounding the sovereignty dilemma? To say of this phenomenon that it is retrogression to quasi-state status is not to say that it is a social capital formation for institution-building purposes.
3. The substantial argument.
Not only do present generations assert Bangsamoro identity as a birthright, but increasingly assert also the demands of current self-understanding of territorial relation in Mindanao as a homeland. There are legal grounds and joint advocacies as to reverence for the land of their forefathers, as to their attachments to ancestral domain, as well as to ancestry of those who arc perceived to have put elements of self-governance into the hind, thereby making it a territory. When we talk about a nation becoming a state from the vantage point of the duality of sovereignty—as a principle organizing our political reality and the understandings of it—it implies that politics needs a domestic arena with order, freedom, and authority. When the Bangsamoro people assert nationhood, we are not necessarily led back to the sovereign state: for a quasi-state is a susceptible recipient of intervention in various forms.
Associative ties and tiers entrenched in spatial dimension perceived to be a geographically contained structure of de ficto asymmetries—cultural, historical, geographic area, and so on—have greater potential for including national pluralism in a compact with which this type of asymmetrical agreement is constituted. To avoid an identity-based fragmentation of the political space, our common grasp of what is consent of the governed must encourage social trust attributes in the totality of relationships that underpin the contractualist rationale for empirical entities. Translated into the context of municipal trust law, it promises a more secured future for the Bangsamoro people. Substantively, when state apparatus hierarchy is reversed by the transition process—leading from the status quo in sequences and time periods—with the defined function of entrenching Bangsamoro rights, the BJE is thus configured by the institutional status arrangement into the political actor attributes.
What types of alternative measure can the central government promote as social trust that, for reasons of equity and social justice, will enable the Bangsamoro people to calculate their capacity to realize their principal interests within and outside the Philippine republic? To be clear, it is a social quality or authority shared. This is not pure academic discourse about construction of new labels, but it is a process of agenda-setting.
One paradoxical measure is to provide in the fundamental charter a clause permitting secession under qualified conditions as to the frequency of consultative referendums and to the majorities required in order to exercise the option to secede.” Contrariwise, this constitutional clause may impel the motivations of the members and of the majority group who are aware of the right of the region to opt for autonomous existence on the international state system.
4. The institutionalist argument.
The neo-institutionalist argument disarms the distrusts for collective rights that could bring authoritarian risk out of institutional mechanisms of demos: It is aware of the historical process that is full of wars, conquests, annexations, exterminations, or marginalization of whole peoples. But the actors have a way of taking revenge on the system.
Historicity grants the actor a more central place.I8Revolution signifies pure negativity, hence extra-constitutional, until Americans reinvented a “negarchy” opposite the “monarchy” matrix type. For all that, what is the un-thought of foundation between the Westphalian orthodoxy (1648) and the Philadelphian negarchy (1776) models? What do we make of the Java-NIalaccan negri or state system within the constellation of the sultanates simultaneous with the genesis of an international system? At the dawn of the state system in 1644, the Spanish colonial state attributed by treaty-right to Sultan Kudarat sovereign authority of the Magindanaw dynastic state. My point here is that the paradigm of rulership limits an understanding of the conceptual antecedents of sovereign authority in modernity.
In sum, the time dimension is underlined, indicating variant forms of sovereignty in historical periods seen as imposed negation of self-understandings opposite each other. That, in fact, does unravel the justness of the original position between the Bangsamoro people and the rest of the Filipino people. Making actual events more mythical adds on making myths more historical in our memories to help both nations understand themselves and to constitute identity. This way forward in our quest for genealogy of sovereign authority is both organized and historicized: In body social via rearrangement of identity and differences. It establishes sovereign authority as a principle of difference. Its origination is organically linked to the state as verified hierarchy and the nation as imagined community.
Interrogating the Philippine hierarchy-state as a whole entity therefore requires thinking out of the box, the kind that is capable of assimilating and associating political and social differences into one form or another and weaving them together as an array of arrangements and ties that acquire a new dimension: What is outside of the imported state is ideology; what is inside is foundation held under the sway of public opinion.
So much for the un-thought foundation of the state system. What happens now to the stress on nationalism arising from secessionist tendencies?
Given that the state has near absolute discretion to confront self determination movements, it does not tell where to go from here. However, ambiguity does not imply cluelessness. When we work out sovereign statecraft in terms of shared sovereign authority relations, we can unpack what links the state and the contested nationhood. Sovereign will, when juxtaposed to the principle of maslaha or general interest, uncovers the bundle of political-constitutional solutions coupled with final status negotiation.