The legitimacy game : the persistence of colonial patterns in U.S.-Philippines relations, 1972-86

Scholarship on the U.S.-Philippines relations often focuses on the pre-1945 period. Even though there is an increasing number of works related to the post-1945 period, those works mainly situate around anti-Marcos activism without paying much attention to the bilateral relations of the two countries...

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Main Author: Koh, Jewel Ting Suen
Other Authors: Justin Clark
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137470
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author Koh, Jewel Ting Suen
author2 Justin Clark
author_facet Justin Clark
Koh, Jewel Ting Suen
author_sort Koh, Jewel Ting Suen
collection NTU
description Scholarship on the U.S.-Philippines relations often focuses on the pre-1945 period. Even though there is an increasing number of works related to the post-1945 period, those works mainly situate around anti-Marcos activism without paying much attention to the bilateral relations of the two countries. This thesis attempts to analyze U.S.-Philippines relations between 1972 and 1986, situating the work within the beginning of martial law in the Philippines and the end of Ferdinand Marcos’s 21 years rule of the Philippines. This paper contends that the U.S.-Philippines relations during the 1970s and 1980s was a period where both governments sought to manufacture their own, as well as each other’s legitimacy in the eyes of the public. The paper shows that the final decades of Marcos’s rule actually fell in line with salient patterns of U.S.-Philippines colonial relationship and that the creation of legitimacy was not a contemporary creation. In fact, analyzing the continuity is the big takeaway from an understudied period of this history as it shows that U.S. intervention in the Philippines during the 1970s and 1980s was because of U.S. colonial patterns that persisted, and not merely based on access to their military bases in the Philippines, as commonly suggested.
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spelling ntu-10356/1374702020-03-27T08:33:40Z The legitimacy game : the persistence of colonial patterns in U.S.-Philippines relations, 1972-86 Koh, Jewel Ting Suen Justin Clark School of Humanities justin.clark@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::History Scholarship on the U.S.-Philippines relations often focuses on the pre-1945 period. Even though there is an increasing number of works related to the post-1945 period, those works mainly situate around anti-Marcos activism without paying much attention to the bilateral relations of the two countries. This thesis attempts to analyze U.S.-Philippines relations between 1972 and 1986, situating the work within the beginning of martial law in the Philippines and the end of Ferdinand Marcos’s 21 years rule of the Philippines. This paper contends that the U.S.-Philippines relations during the 1970s and 1980s was a period where both governments sought to manufacture their own, as well as each other’s legitimacy in the eyes of the public. The paper shows that the final decades of Marcos’s rule actually fell in line with salient patterns of U.S.-Philippines colonial relationship and that the creation of legitimacy was not a contemporary creation. In fact, analyzing the continuity is the big takeaway from an understudied period of this history as it shows that U.S. intervention in the Philippines during the 1970s and 1980s was because of U.S. colonial patterns that persisted, and not merely based on access to their military bases in the Philippines, as commonly suggested. Bachelor of Arts in History 2020-03-27T03:24:22Z 2020-03-27T03:24:22Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137470 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
spellingShingle Humanities::History
Koh, Jewel Ting Suen
The legitimacy game : the persistence of colonial patterns in U.S.-Philippines relations, 1972-86
title The legitimacy game : the persistence of colonial patterns in U.S.-Philippines relations, 1972-86
title_full The legitimacy game : the persistence of colonial patterns in U.S.-Philippines relations, 1972-86
title_fullStr The legitimacy game : the persistence of colonial patterns in U.S.-Philippines relations, 1972-86
title_full_unstemmed The legitimacy game : the persistence of colonial patterns in U.S.-Philippines relations, 1972-86
title_short The legitimacy game : the persistence of colonial patterns in U.S.-Philippines relations, 1972-86
title_sort legitimacy game the persistence of colonial patterns in u s philippines relations 1972 86
topic Humanities::History
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137470
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