Partisanship and Reform: The Making of a Presidential Campaign[1]
Written by Joel Rocamora
Thursday, 10 December 2009
"Let's not make the perfect the enemy of the essential."
Barack Obama, February 04, 2009
There is real possibility for a significant leap in the reform process in the Philippines after the 2010 elections. If, as seems likely at this time, Noynoy Aquino wins the presidency, a number of converging developments could produce the conditions necessary for change. The first is Noynoy himself, who has successfully embodied the political legacy of his mother Cory, and his father Ninoy. This, in turn, has introduced a new dimension of enthusiastic voluntarism to the election campaign. Finally, the people running Noynoy’s campaign constitute the leading core of an enlarged reform constituency.
Discussion Paper: The Poor in the City after Ondoy
Written by Erik Villanueva
Friday, 30 October 2009
The major typhoons that hit the Philippines towards the last quarter brought the worst flooding in the greater metropolitan Manila area in four decades. Wide, densely populated areas were inundated, damaging billions worth of infrastructure and affecting more than four million people. Many of those who were chased out of their homes by floodwaters have returned and started rebuilding or have relocated to new communities. But thousands remain in evacuation centers. They are the families of informal settlers living along major waterways that could no longer return to their homes even if floodwaters spawned by the typhoons have completely subsided.
Face to Face: 100 Local Government Champions vs. 4 Presidential Contenders
Written by Lani C. Villanueva
Friday, 09 October 2009
Genuine local autonomy to improve delivery of essential services
Local government officials unveil reform agenda for the next president
There is a need to reform local-central government relations to enhance delivery of essential services for the poor and achieve fundamental development outcomes. In order to do this, there is a need to go back to the basics of genuine local autonomy. This is the consensus of local chief executives assembled at the AIM Conference Center for a two-day meeting to identify key local governance reforms called “Face to Face: 100 Local Government Champions vs. 4 Presidential Contenders.” Mainly mayors and governors, with a track record on political reform, the participants agreed on a reform agenda that they want the new president in 2010 will adopt to improve local governance.
Noynoy and Gibo to face-off for the first time at a local governance conference next week
Written by Lani C. Villanueva
Monday, 28 September 2009
Next week, on October 5-6, IPD will host the first official face-off between Liberal Party standard bearer Sen. Noynoy Aquino and administration candidate and DND Secretary Gilbert Teodoro. Teodoro and Aquino are attending "Face to Face: 100 Local Government Champions vs. 4 Presidential Contenders," at the AIM Conference Center Manila, a two-day conference to identify bottom line reforms on local-central government relations and to discuss these reforms with the more thoughtful presidential candidates. IPD is organizing this conference along with Synergeia Foundation, Galing Pook Foundation, Ateneo School of Government, and Local Governance Support Program in ARMM (LGSPA).
"Let's not make the perfect the enemy of the essential."
Barack Obama, February 04, 2009
One of the worst things our politicians have done is to give“partisanship” a bad name. Kung sila lang rin naman ang pagpipilian saeleksyon, why be partisan? But politicians do not deserve all the credit forthe debilitating hesitation of reformers to enter the electoral arena. Thepolitical predispositions of the Left, civil society and the Christian churcheshave combined to leave the political arena to those politicians that they object to.
Face to Face: 100 Local Government Champions vs. 4 Presidential Contenders NOW AVAILABLE
Face to Face: 100 Local Government Champions vs. 4 Presidential Contenders” convened the most innovative and successful elected local officials in the Philippines. This initiative was conceived by the Institute for Popular Democracy (IPD) and implemented in cooperation with Synergeia Foundation, Galing Pook Foundation, Ateneo School of Government, and Local Governance Support Program in ARMM (LGSPA) and with funding support from the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (FES).