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<title>BA Political Science</title>
<link>http://dspace.cas.upm.edu.ph:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/478</link>
<description>Bachelor thesis of BA Political Science</description>
<pubDate>Sun, 24 May 2026 18:17:28 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-05-24T18:17:28Z</dc:date>
<item>
<title>A Study on Quezon City’s Ordinances and Resolutions Regarding Women Development</title>
<link>http://dspace.cas.upm.edu.ph:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3706</link>
<description>A Study on Quezon City’s Ordinances and Resolutions Regarding Women Development
Del Rosario, Marita L.
The issue of gender discrimination and bias, particularly of women, had been put&#13;
to the light. During the past years, there had been major objections regarding the way&#13;
women were treated unfairly in the different areas such as in their homes, schools and&#13;
workplaces. With it came the clamor of concerned sectors to put an end to this situation.&#13;
Contained in this paper are the conditions of women as they evolved throughout a long&#13;
span of time. There had been major changes that happened and many factors that&#13;
contributed to both the progress and regress of women.&#13;
The government has done its part in promulgating laws that seek to remove&#13;
gender inequality and promote the full participation of women in all activities of society.&#13;
This kind of authority had been passed on to the local government units. This research&#13;
probes on the effectivity of Quezon City in complying with these laws.&#13;
The methods employed by this study are library and document research.&#13;
Interviews were also set with the city's officials regarding their perception in the&#13;
promotion of women development. A survey was conducted to know how effective&#13;
Quezon City is with the implementation of their laws concerning women development.&#13;
With these, data was gathered and proved that, indeed, Quezon City has a high level of&#13;
gender sensitivity. It is seen through the creation of ordinances and resolutions that&#13;
greatly benefited women and cares for their well-being.
</description>
<pubDate>Sat, 01 Apr 2000 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dspace.cas.upm.edu.ph:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3706</guid>
<dc:date>2000-04-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item>
<title>Mamamayan Muna Hindi Mamaya Na Program In the City of Muntinlupa: An Evaluation (Pilot Model at the Local Government Level)</title>
<link>http://dspace.cas.upm.edu.ph:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3703</link>
<description>Mamamayan Muna Hindi Mamaya Na Program In the City of Muntinlupa: An Evaluation (Pilot Model at the Local Government Level)
De Guzman, Ma. Genevive E.
The Civil Service Commission, as the central personnel&#13;
agency of the government, provides the necessary programs&#13;
to address the problems regarding the civil service. It is&#13;
the agency responsible for the implementation of programs&#13;
to reform the behavior and attitude of the public servants&#13;
towards a more efficient, courteous, and professional&#13;
public service to the people.&#13;
As one of these programs, Mamamayan Muna Hindi Mamaya&#13;
Na aims to institutionalize quick and courteous public&#13;
service as the standard norm of behavior. To provide the&#13;
proper motivation to its personnel, through the program,&#13;
the government seeks to confer immediate recognition on&#13;
employees for acts of courtesy and prompt service to the&#13;
people. And most importantly, the public can now be heard&#13;
directly by the government through the redress mechanism&#13;
for grievances against discourteous and arrogant employees&#13;
provided by the program.&#13;
The nationwide efforts of the government to bring&#13;
behavioral reform into the civil service has been&#13;
decentralized and is now being implemented at the local government level. The same objectives were aimed at the&#13;
level of the cities and municipalities. Through this&#13;
effort, the benefits of the program can be directly and&#13;
instantly enjoyed by the people for whom the government is&#13;
of service. The City of Muntinlupa was identified as the&#13;
model for the program implementation at the local&#13;
government level by the Civil Service Commission.
</description>
<pubDate>Sun, 01 Apr 2001 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dspace.cas.upm.edu.ph:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3703</guid>
<dc:date>2001-04-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item>
<title>Towards a Philippine Federalist Experience: An Inquiry into the Effects of a Federal System of Government in the Delivery of Basic Services</title>
<link>http://dspace.cas.upm.edu.ph:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3702</link>
<description>Towards a Philippine Federalist Experience: An Inquiry into the Effects of a Federal System of Government in the Delivery of Basic Services
De Castro, Claudette L.
There is an emerging movement calling federalization today. The farther one&#13;
goes to the South, the greater the people accept and support the federal idea.&#13;
A number of related studies and researches had been made in preparation for a&#13;
possible federal transition, including a draft constitution and an official resolution&#13;
advancing the federal cause. Academics and public officials backed with a considerable&#13;
nationwide mass support are behind these efforts. Their demand revolves around two&#13;
main objectives that Senator Aquilino Pimentel outlined. That is, it is by federalism&#13;
where the promotion of economic development is faster and more equally distributed,&#13;
secondly, it is by federalism that the age-old problem of Moro secessionism in Mindanao&#13;
can be addressed adequately, squarely and completely.&#13;
Parallel to the federalist idea is another school of thought which believes that&#13;
decentralization measures, as espoused under the 1991 Local Government Code, should&#13;
be fully implementing first. It argues that the provisions of the Code had not been fully&#13;
utilized and optimized. Hence, there is therefore no need, as of yet, to take any more&#13;
drastic step, such as federalism.&#13;
It is in this context that this thesis shall anchor its foundations on: the idea that&#13;
federalism is a good alternative system of government for the Philippines. The study will&#13;
determine the relationship of federalism and the system of public service provision, one&#13;
of the most critical problem areas in the country today.&#13;
Federalism is the system of government where power is distributed among the&#13;
independent states of a nation under the supervision of the central government as opposed&#13;
to the unitary system, where power is firmly concentrated in the hands of a strong central government. The federal principle pertains to the method of dividing powers in such a&#13;
way that the general and the regional governments are each within a sphere, coordinate&#13;
and independent to each other. It is characterized by a tendency to substitute&#13;
coordinating to subordinating relationships.&#13;
This research works under the hypothesis that the interplay of local autonomy,&#13;
fiscal autonomy and the local chief executive under a federal system can better address&#13;
the problem. It is maintained, given stronger linkages and stronger power and fiscal&#13;
foundations conferred to LGUs, and the heightened role of the local chief executive under&#13;
a federal system, that policies and programs related to the delivery of basic services will&#13;
be more locality-responsive, more accessible for a greater number of people.&#13;
Local autonomy involves the devolution of powers to local government units, thus&#13;
it is equated to political decentralization. Local fiscal administration is the conduct and&#13;
management of the financial affairs and operations of provinces, cities, municipalities,&#13;
and barangays. Fiscal autonomy therefore refers to the freedom of LGUs to conduct and&#13;
manage their own financial affairs with minimum central government regulations.&#13;
There are however, several arguments that can refute this study's assumptions.&#13;
For instance, the contention that some regions and provinces are not developed enough to&#13;
financially support itself, and that the local taxes and IRA shares of LGUs is not enough&#13;
to finance local development operations, much more be financially independent.&#13;
Especially in depressed areas, there is no strong and stable fiscal base to begin with.&#13;
Also, there is the issue that development, more particularly the improvement of the&#13;
quality of the delivery system under a federal government becomes highly dependent on&#13;
the local chief executive's effort. This is based on the perception that local officials are not politically mature and experienced enough to hold the reigns of greater power and&#13;
responsibility in a more complex governmental arrangement. Then, there is also the&#13;
critical issue of revising the 1987 Constitution to change the current political order.&#13;
These are just some of the arguments behind anti-federalist sentiments.&#13;
On the other hand, there are also equally attractive arguments in favor of&#13;
federalism, particularly when public service provision is concerned. Federalism&#13;
highlights the role of the LGU and its constituencies in developmental efforts. This&#13;
measure highly benefits the local government unit, especially the LGUs in far-flung areas&#13;
dependent only on the insubstantial trickle down benefits for their own development.&#13;
This situation often lead to retarded growth and mediocre policies and programs. Since&#13;
federalism will change how policies and laws are enacted and executed, then it can&#13;
arrange for closer and more open channels for citizen participation in policy-making,&#13;
law-making and governance as a whole. The federal system of government affords to the&#13;
people the choice to make a more proactive stance in charting their political, social and&#13;
economic growth.&#13;
Among the major findings of this research, include the discovery that the history&#13;
of governance in the Philippines is one of an alternating pattern of centralization and&#13;
decentralization. The level of centralism depends largely on the political, economic, and&#13;
military interests of the political elite in power. Recent trends show, at least policy-wise,&#13;
that there has been an increasing bias toward decentralization. In reality however,&#13;
'overcentralization' still prevails. Major decisions are still made in Metro Manila and in&#13;
the few power centers, to the detriment of the marginalized majority. Backlogs in the&#13;
bureaucracy are an indication that the central government is being plagued by small-town and provincial concerns that should be handled locally in the first place.&#13;
Overcentralization result to LGU dependency on the national government.&#13;
Notwithstanding constitutional and statutory provisions, the majority of the LGUs in the&#13;
Philippines today are far from being self-reliant and self-sustaining partners of&#13;
development as they were envisioned to be.&#13;
Furthermore, it has been found that generally, the local government system in the&#13;
country is one wrought of problems in funding and fiscal administration. Respondents&#13;
observed that the LGU budget and revenue sources are not enough to sufficiently support&#13;
local government operations, adversely affecting quality and quantity of basic services&#13;
delivered. Although the Code provided for additional sources for revenue generation,&#13;
other studies point out that the traditional means are still generally applied. Only a few&#13;
LGUs with diligent local chief executives venture on practicing more innovative and&#13;
productive means of fiscal administration and revenue generation.&#13;
The primary barriers that would defeat the passage of the federal proposal is the&#13;
fundamental trait to be aversive to change, not to mention the wariness of the Filipino&#13;
people, understandably so, to be vigilant on the issue of charter change and the hidden&#13;
motivations behind it. There is also the fact that the current political, economic and&#13;
security conditions in the Philippines today is too erratic to sponsor an environment&#13;
strong enough to withstand the initial destabilizing effects of the federalization process.&#13;
Personally, given the advantages and disadvantages of both the unitary and the&#13;
federal systems, the researcher believes that federalism can become a better system of&#13;
governance for the Philippines, especially when the issue of the basic service delivery is concerned. Theoretically, federalism is a beautiful concept but the issue of the&#13;
practicability of transforming the unitary system into a federal one at this point in time, is&#13;
another matter. The question on whether federalism can function effectively in the&#13;
Philippine setting given the context of the times is another important consideration.&#13;
Federalism can be made to work, if and when, public officials, the people and all&#13;
other sectors of the society make a conscious, collective and constant effort to make&#13;
federalism work. Generally, given the merits and the demerits of applying the federal&#13;
system, and the unsupportive and unstable conditions mentioned, the researcher&#13;
recommends to continue working for full implementation of the provisions of the Local&#13;
Government Code. But with the stipulation that while measures are being taken to&#13;
address the problem of public service provision, with the short run solution of fully&#13;
decentralizing first, federalization studies and federalization plans should continue and&#13;
even be made to intensify.&#13;
Thus, fully decentralize now, but federalize later. A transition period should&#13;
ensue, first and foremost, to warrant a smoother, popularly accepted and less painful&#13;
federalization process. The appropriate structures should be properly enshrined first.&#13;
Continuous education and information campaigns should be done to fully define as well&#13;
as to explain to the public officials and the people of their new and critical role in this&#13;
massive national endeavor.&#13;
The challenge of federalism is before us. Let us make a choice.
</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 2003 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dspace.cas.upm.edu.ph:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3702</guid>
<dc:date>2003-04-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item>
<title>Effects of the Electric Power Industry Reform Act of 2001 (EPIRA) on Meralco Consumers</title>
<link>http://dspace.cas.upm.edu.ph:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3701</link>
<description>Effects of the Electric Power Industry Reform Act of 2001 (EPIRA) on Meralco Consumers
Decano, Ronald John B.
The Electricity Industry in the Philippines has been burdened with a lot of&#13;
problems. The financial situation of Napocor and an impending power crisis led the&#13;
government to restructure the industry. The task of providing electricity to the people&#13;
would be passed on into the hands of the private sector to relieve the government of some&#13;
concerns so that it could concentrate on other important matters.&#13;
The Power Reform Act provided the solution to the query of the government. It&#13;
contained provisions that would permit private companies to enter the industry.&#13;
Competition would ensue due to the influx of competitors resulting to better services and&#13;
eventually affordable prices. As a consequence, investors would gain confidence on our&#13;
economy. They would invest capital providing stability to the country. This would be&#13;
good in terms of the status of the government especially to President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.&#13;
Meralco for its part has provided its consumers with quality, reliable and secure&#13;
electricity. This has been validated by respondents constituting roughly 75%. However,&#13;
their only complaint is the expensive rate that is charged to them.&#13;
As a final note, a stable economy and satisfied constituents would yield high&#13;
ratings for the President. These things would make EPIRA effective in solving the&#13;
problems of the industry.
</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 01 Apr 2003 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dspace.cas.upm.edu.ph:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3701</guid>
<dc:date>2003-04-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
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