Leia Castañeda Anastacio
The Foundations of the Modern Philippine State
Leia Castañeda Anastacio
The Foundations of the Modern Philippine State
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 340
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. November 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 494g
- ISBN-13: 9781108790710
- ISBN-10: 1108790712
- Artikelnr.: 58304428
Leia Castañeda Anastacio is an independent scholar affiliate of Harvard Law School's East Asian Legal Studies program. Placing first in the 1993 Philippine Bar Examinations, she was awarded Harvard Law School's Yong Kim '95 Memorial Prize in 2008 and the American Society of Legal History's William Nelson Cromwell Foundation Dissertation Prize in 2010.
Introduction; 1. Republican means
imperial ends: American empire and the rule of law; 2. American theory
Spanish structure
and Ilustrado capacity: inventing the Filipino people
constructing the American colonial state; 3. Foreign in a domestic sense: organic sovereignty
unincorporated territories
and the insular doctrine; 4. Sovereign but not popular: Colonial Leviathan
inherent power
and plenary authority; 5. Progressive interventions
parchment barriers: civilizing mission
colonial development
and constitutional limitations; 6. Popular but not sovereign: colonial democracy and the rise of the Philippine Assembly; 7. American vessels
Filipino spirit: Filipinizing the government of the Philippine Islands; 8. Filipinizing the public: the business of government and the government in business; 9. Progressivism
populism
and the public interest: restoring Taft era and the Cabinet Crisis of 1923; 10. Colonial conflict
constitutional categories: constitutional Imperialism and the Board of Control Cases; 11. From 'is' to 'ought': constitutionalizing colonial legacies; Conclusion.
imperial ends: American empire and the rule of law; 2. American theory
Spanish structure
and Ilustrado capacity: inventing the Filipino people
constructing the American colonial state; 3. Foreign in a domestic sense: organic sovereignty
unincorporated territories
and the insular doctrine; 4. Sovereign but not popular: Colonial Leviathan
inherent power
and plenary authority; 5. Progressive interventions
parchment barriers: civilizing mission
colonial development
and constitutional limitations; 6. Popular but not sovereign: colonial democracy and the rise of the Philippine Assembly; 7. American vessels
Filipino spirit: Filipinizing the government of the Philippine Islands; 8. Filipinizing the public: the business of government and the government in business; 9. Progressivism
populism
and the public interest: restoring Taft era and the Cabinet Crisis of 1923; 10. Colonial conflict
constitutional categories: constitutional Imperialism and the Board of Control Cases; 11. From 'is' to 'ought': constitutionalizing colonial legacies; Conclusion.
Introduction; 1. Republican means
imperial ends: American empire and the rule of law; 2. American theory
Spanish structure
and Ilustrado capacity: inventing the Filipino people
constructing the American colonial state; 3. Foreign in a domestic sense: organic sovereignty
unincorporated territories
and the insular doctrine; 4. Sovereign but not popular: Colonial Leviathan
inherent power
and plenary authority; 5. Progressive interventions
parchment barriers: civilizing mission
colonial development
and constitutional limitations; 6. Popular but not sovereign: colonial democracy and the rise of the Philippine Assembly; 7. American vessels
Filipino spirit: Filipinizing the government of the Philippine Islands; 8. Filipinizing the public: the business of government and the government in business; 9. Progressivism
populism
and the public interest: restoring Taft era and the Cabinet Crisis of 1923; 10. Colonial conflict
constitutional categories: constitutional Imperialism and the Board of Control Cases; 11. From 'is' to 'ought': constitutionalizing colonial legacies; Conclusion.
imperial ends: American empire and the rule of law; 2. American theory
Spanish structure
and Ilustrado capacity: inventing the Filipino people
constructing the American colonial state; 3. Foreign in a domestic sense: organic sovereignty
unincorporated territories
and the insular doctrine; 4. Sovereign but not popular: Colonial Leviathan
inherent power
and plenary authority; 5. Progressive interventions
parchment barriers: civilizing mission
colonial development
and constitutional limitations; 6. Popular but not sovereign: colonial democracy and the rise of the Philippine Assembly; 7. American vessels
Filipino spirit: Filipinizing the government of the Philippine Islands; 8. Filipinizing the public: the business of government and the government in business; 9. Progressivism
populism
and the public interest: restoring Taft era and the Cabinet Crisis of 1923; 10. Colonial conflict
constitutional categories: constitutional Imperialism and the Board of Control Cases; 11. From 'is' to 'ought': constitutionalizing colonial legacies; Conclusion.