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4.2 SUMMARY TABLE
SUMMARY FINDINGS
Infrastructure development privileges the country’s national narrative of “resiliency” and “progress” and prioritizes urban centers
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ACTION ITEMS
Investment in infrastructure at the scale of the “barangay”
Land tenure claims privilege Western representations and constructs of knowledge A countermapping exercise to define the value of “natural capital” ———moving away from Watson’s approach to Kolowartnik’s approach • decentering the “expert” • participatory planning • equal partner in development
Participation ≠ power for indigenous people Improving facilitation tools and exploring respectful ways of representation, centering the CARE Principles for Data Governance
Contradicting policies + convoluted development process
Development projects’ secondary goal of addressing the well-being of the Filipinx people has mostly failed Visualizing the process to make the process more accessible
Better understanding inter province/island migration patterns related to climate displacement + disaster / reconstruction labour
Issues are systemic on a shared global level Identify strategic alliances in cultural
• preservation and existing environmental advocacy efforts • Preservation of language • Subsistence farmers • Transnational Filipinx diaspora advocacy • Climate change and island geographies
(Figure 42-43, back cover)
Site-specific memorial created by artist Carolina Caycedo (on current display at El Museo del Barrio, New York)