The Anarchy of Families (BlockB)
The Anarchy of Families (BlockB)
The Anarchy of Families (BlockB)
Philippines
By McCoy
(Through case studies of popular political families, McCoy traces the roots of our
present socio-political system and proposes economic and cultural factors for its
perpetuation)
I.
Like in Latin America, weak state and powerful oligarchies combine to make
familial perspective on national history relevant.
Philippines has long history of strong families assuring survival when nationstate is weak.
After 1946 independence, Philippine central govt lost control of countryside to
regional politicians, some so powerful they became warlords.
Warlords- through private armies, reinforce economic power and political
offices
- Terrorized peasantry and extracted de facto regional autonomy
- Regional autonomy is the price in delivering their vote banks to
Manila politicians
A. Role of the family
Social capital what the state cant provide, the family must (e.g. take care
of the sick)
Employment capital educates the young, protects good name, commands
highest loyalty, transmits character to succeeding generations
B. Central Characteristic
Bilateral descent acknowledge relatives from both mother and father side
- Produces overlapping, ego-centric networks
- Devoid of lineal or vertical continuity but expanded
horizontally
- Necessarily forges broad alliances to negotiate intrafamilial
politics
II.
Economic manipulation
Military force