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See also: Republic of the Philippines Catholic Church in the Philippines Chinese in the Philippines American occupation of the Philippines University of the Philippines Cultural Center of the Philippines Literary University of the Philippines 1987 Constitution of the Philippines Commonwealth of the Philippines return to the Philippines

Self Government in the Philippines - [Full Text] [Relevance: 81.0%]
This book of Maximo M. Kalaw, former chairperson of the U.P. Dept. of Political Science and secretary of the Philippine Mission to the United States, recounts the development of gradual and greater Philippine...
Catalog info
Type of Material: Book
Author(s): Kalaw, Maximo null
Place of Publication: New York, United States
Period: American Occupation
Keywords: Jones<font class='highlight'> Law</font> Filipino-American relations Treaty of Paris Philippine-American War William McKinley U.S. occupation of the<font class='highlight'> Philippines </font> expansionist propaganda Theodore Roosevelt Emilio Aguinaldo Organic<font class='highlight'> Law</font> of 1902 Cooper Act, Organic<font class='highlight'> Law</font> of 1916, Philippine legislature, pro-independence campaigns, resisting U. S. colonial rule, Filipinization of the bureaucracy, benevolent assimilation, William Howard Taft, Woodrow Wilson, Philippine autonomy,American colonial government, political conditions-American period, Philippine-American War, Organic Act of 1902, Cooper<font class='highlight'> Law</font>, Jones<font class='highlight'> Law</font>, creation of the Philippine Assembly, Philippine Commission, speaker of the Philippine Assembly, Francis Burton Harrison, executive-legislative conflicts, creation of the Philippine Senate, Manuel Quezon as Senate President, Nacionalista Party, Rafael Palma as senator, Reorganization Act, political elite-American period, Sergio Osmeña as Speaker of the House, judiciary-American period, members of the Supreme Court, power of the American governor-general, roles of Council of State, Philippine autonomy, Filipinization-colonial government,fiscal policy-American period, Cooper Act, Organic Act of 1902, Jones<font class='highlight'> Law</font>, Philippine Assembly, Philippine Commission, power of the governor-general, appropriation bills-American period, Francis Burton Harrison, fiscal legislation-American period, budget system-establishment of, Department of Finance, Council of State, executive-legislative relations, separation of powers, Philippine treasury-improvement of,Philippines during the World War I, Philippine Legislature resolution on World War I, General R. K. Evans, General Jones, General Bailey, General Greene, World War I efforts of Philippine government, Bureau of Education, Bureau of Agriculture, Red Cross Chapter of the<font class='highlight'> Philippines </font>, Bureau of Science, prices of basic commodities, inflationary effect of the war, Secretary Newton D. Baker, Statement of Woodrow Wilson on the<font class='highlight'> Philippines </font>, self-determination-right of, Philippine-American relations,Philippine independence, Woodrow Wilson, Francis Burton Harrison, Philippine economy-20th century, foreign trade-Philippines-20th century,<font class='highlight'> Philippines </font>-United States economic relations, major trade partners of the<font class='highlight'> Philippines </font>, Philippine autonomy, local enterprises-20th century, American investments, economic imperialism in the<font class='highlight'> Philippines </font>,Francis Burton Harrison, development of local government units, Philippine Legislature on local governments, Administrative Code of 1917,<font class='highlight'> Law</font>s on local government units, Christians-Muslims relations, indigenous peoples relations, Filipinization of local governments, supervision of the governor-general, local autonomy-American period, improvement of local administration, economic development-attainment of, mass education-American period, local governments on public health,programs towards Muslims-American period, Indigenous Cultural Communities-American Period, Indigenous Peoples, Jones<font class='highlight'> Law</font> on Muslims and indigenous peoples, creation of Bureau on non-Christian Tribes, Act No. 2674, integration of indigenous peoples, extension of social services, Department of Mindanao and Sulu, Dr. Sixto Orosa in Sulu, immigration policy-American period, homestead program in Mindanao, Muslim leaders-American period, Muslim Filipinos-Christian Filipinos relations, Sultan Jamal-ul Kiram II, annexation of Sulu, Datu Pedro Cuevas, pacification campaign-Mindanao, Muslim in Philippine Legislature, Senator Hadji Butu Abdul Baqui, Datu Piang, Datu Benito, policy towards Muslims and indigenous peoples,stable government, U.S. imperialism, U.S. intervention, Cuba-United States relations, William McKinley, independence of South American republics, Cuban war of independence, Spanish-American War, Jones<font class='highlight'> Law</font>, Democrats on Philippine independence, Monroe Doctrine, Philippine Legislature, Commission of Independence, Philippine independence from the U.S., <font class='highlight'> Philippines </font>-United States relations, Philippine national and local elections, Philippine autonomy, Francis Burton Harrison, Filipinization of the bureaucracy, Council of State, judiciary, American governor-generals, Charles E. Yeater, Woodrow Wilson,Philippines-United States relations, Woodrow Wilson, Commission of Independence of the Philippine Legislature, Philippine territory-advantages, Japanese expansionism,<font class='highlight'> Philippines </font>-Japan relations, democracy in the<font class='highlight'> Philippines </font>, literacy rate-Philippines, suffrage-American period, Apolinario Mabini, Malolos Republic, First Philippine Republic, political elite-American period, distribution of lands, status of women in Philippine society, social justice-American period, agriculture and commercial possibilities of the<font class='highlight'> Philippines </font>
Subjects: Philippines--Politics and Government--1898-1935
The 1935 Constitution of the Philippines - [Full Text] [Relevance: 80.0%]
The 1935 Constitution of the Philippines served as the fundamental law of the land from 1935 to 1972. It establishes the Commonwealth of the
Catalog info
Type of Material: Book
Author(s): , Philippines. Constitutional Convention
Place of Publication: Philippines
Date: May 14, 1935
Period: American Occupation
Keywords: Constitutions 1935 Constitution Commonwealth of the Philippines Philippine Independence Commission on Elections Constitutional law
Subjects: Constitutions--Philippines Constitutional law--Philippines Philippines--Politics & government--American occupation
Presidential Decree No. 442, as amended: A Decree instituting a Labor Code thereby revising and consolidating labor and social laws to afford protection to labor, promote employment and human resources development and insure industrial peace based on social justice - [Full Text] [Relevance: 80.0%]
Presidential Decree No. 442, as amended, otherwise known as the Labor Code of the Philippines , is the law governing employers and employees...
Catalog info
Type of Material: Other
Author(s): Marcos, Ferdinand E.
Place of Publication: Manila, Philippines
Date: May 1, 1974
Period: Contemporary Period
Keywords: Labor Code of the Philippines Presidential Decree No. 442 Labor<font class='highlight'> Law</font> and Social Legislation Labor Standards Labor Relations
Subjects: Laws--Philippines Labor laws and legislation--Philippines
R.A. 6955: An act to declare unlawful the practice of matching Filipino women for marriage to foreign nationals on a mail-order basis and other similar practices, including the advertisement, publication, printing or distribution of brochures, fliers and other propaganda materials in furtherance thereof and providing penalty therefor - [Full Text] [Relevance: 77.0%]
Republic Act No. 6955 is enacted primarily to protect Filipino women from exploitation, in accordance with the State policy of ensuring the enjoyment of a decent standard of living by the Filipino people....
Catalog info
Type of Material: Other
Author(s): Congress of the Philippines,
Place of Publication: Manila, Philippines
Date: June 13, 1990
Period: Contemporary Period
Keywords: R.A.6955 Mail-order brides Laws on women
Subjects: Law--Philippines Criminal law--Philippines Social legislation--Philippines Women--Legal status, laws, etc.--Philippines
[ Jones Law ] An act to declare the purpose of the people of the United States as to the future political status of the people of the Philippine Islands, and to provide a more autonomous government for those islands. - [Full Text] [Relevance: 76.0%]
The Philippine Organic Law (Act of Congress of August 29, 1916), popularly known as the "Jones Law" or Philippine Autonomy Act of 1916, formally...
Catalog info
Type of Material: Other
Author(s): , 64th Congress of the United States of America
Place of Publication: Manila, Philippines
Date: August 29, 1916
Period: American Occupation
Keywords: Jones<font class='highlight'> Law </font>, 1916 Woodrow, Wilson Jones, William Atkinson, 1849-1914 Philippine Autonomy Act Philippine Organic<font class='highlight'> Law </font>s
Subjects: Jones<font class='highlight'> Law </font>, 1916 Philippines--Politics & government Law--Philippines
Constitution of the Second Philippine Republic [The 1943 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines] - [Full Text] [Relevance: 76.0%]
The 1943 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines , composed of a preamble and twelve articles, creates a Republican state with a powerful executive branch and subordinate...
Catalog info
Type of Material: Other
Author(s): , Preparatory Commission for Philippine Independence (PCPI)
Place of Publication: Manila, Philippines
Date: September 7, 1943
Period: Japanese Occupation
Keywords: Constitutions Philippine Republic Japanese Occupation Constitutional law KALIBAPI Kapisanan sa Paglilingkod sa Bagong Pilipinas Greater East Asia War PCPI Preparatory Commission for Philippine Independence national language Tagalog
Subjects: Constitutions--Philippines Philippines--Politics & government--Japanese Occupation
Constitution of the Philippines . Adopted by the Philippine Constitutional Convention at the City of Manila, Philippine Islands on the 8th Day of February 1935. - [Full Text] [Relevance: 76.0%]
The Constitution of the Philippines , adopted by the Philippine Constitutional Convention on 8 February 1935, provides for the establishment of the transitional government...
Catalog info
Type of Material: Book
Author(s): , Philippine Constitutional Convention
Place of Publication: Washington, D.C., United States
Date: 1935
Period: American Occupation
Keywords: Constitutions 1935 Constitution Commonwealth of the Philippines Constitutional conventions
Subjects: Constitutions--Philippines Philippines--Politics & government--American occupation
Climate of the Philippines - [Full Text] [Relevance: 76.0%]
Father Jose P. Algue, Director of the Manila Observatory, asserts that because of variations in geography and distances between the islands, the Philippines cannot be classified...
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