The ouster of President Joseph E. Estrada and its effects on Philippine society (1997 2002)

This thesis analyzes and contextualizes the immediate effects of Estrada's removal from office on Philippine society by highlighting the united opposition's efforts to oust Estrada in EDSA Dos and the pro-Estrada group's attempt to reinstate him in EDSA Tres which both involved a vari...

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Main Author: Mariano, Carlos Antonio R.
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2021
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etdb_history/1
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=etdb_history
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Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etdb_history-10002021-07-27T08:23:15Z The ouster of President Joseph E. Estrada and its effects on Philippine society (1997 2002) Mariano, Carlos Antonio R. This thesis analyzes and contextualizes the immediate effects of Estrada's removal from office on Philippine society by highlighting the united opposition's efforts to oust Estrada in EDSA Dos and the pro-Estrada group's attempt to reinstate him in EDSA Tres which both involved a variety of people from multiple sectors of Philippine society. The thesis identifies the different narratives by the pro- and anti-Estrada camps before, during, and after his ouster by looking at his removal as a result of the convergence of the Philippine political, social, financial, and sectarian elite as the opposition. Therefore, EDSA Dos and EDSA Tres were conflicts for power between the elites, the middle-class, and the masa. EDSA Dos, an elite-led people power protest became successful in removing Estrada from office and opened the way for his arrest. Estrada's arrest had angered the already enraged masa, who had felt unheard and ill-treated by the elites and the middle-class who never understood their plight. EDSA Tres became the counter people power to reinstate their champion to power and to unleash their vengeful rage which had been building for the longest time. The elites on both sides, responsible for financing, supporting, and maintaining fiery passions on both sides, were influential and used the middle-class and the masa to achieve their ulterior ambitions. Without the elites, EDSA Dos and Tres would likely have never happened. Lastly, Estrada's ouster set a dangerous precedent for institutionalizing people power as a legitimate form of bringing social and political change that had undermined Philippine democracy and thus made it further volatile, weak, and fragile. 2021-02-12T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etdb_history/1 https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=etdb_history History Bachelor's Theses English Animo Repository Estrada, Joseph Ejercito, 1937--Impeachment Philippines—History—1986- Political History
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Estrada, Joseph Ejercito, 1937--Impeachment
Philippines—History—1986-
Political History
spellingShingle Estrada, Joseph Ejercito, 1937--Impeachment
Philippines—History—1986-
Political History
Mariano, Carlos Antonio R.
The ouster of President Joseph E. Estrada and its effects on Philippine society (1997 2002)
description This thesis analyzes and contextualizes the immediate effects of Estrada's removal from office on Philippine society by highlighting the united opposition's efforts to oust Estrada in EDSA Dos and the pro-Estrada group's attempt to reinstate him in EDSA Tres which both involved a variety of people from multiple sectors of Philippine society. The thesis identifies the different narratives by the pro- and anti-Estrada camps before, during, and after his ouster by looking at his removal as a result of the convergence of the Philippine political, social, financial, and sectarian elite as the opposition. Therefore, EDSA Dos and EDSA Tres were conflicts for power between the elites, the middle-class, and the masa. EDSA Dos, an elite-led people power protest became successful in removing Estrada from office and opened the way for his arrest. Estrada's arrest had angered the already enraged masa, who had felt unheard and ill-treated by the elites and the middle-class who never understood their plight. EDSA Tres became the counter people power to reinstate their champion to power and to unleash their vengeful rage which had been building for the longest time. The elites on both sides, responsible for financing, supporting, and maintaining fiery passions on both sides, were influential and used the middle-class and the masa to achieve their ulterior ambitions. Without the elites, EDSA Dos and Tres would likely have never happened. Lastly, Estrada's ouster set a dangerous precedent for institutionalizing people power as a legitimate form of bringing social and political change that had undermined Philippine democracy and thus made it further volatile, weak, and fragile.
format text
author Mariano, Carlos Antonio R.
author_facet Mariano, Carlos Antonio R.
author_sort Mariano, Carlos Antonio R.
title The ouster of President Joseph E. Estrada and its effects on Philippine society (1997 2002)
title_short The ouster of President Joseph E. Estrada and its effects on Philippine society (1997 2002)
title_full The ouster of President Joseph E. Estrada and its effects on Philippine society (1997 2002)
title_fullStr The ouster of President Joseph E. Estrada and its effects on Philippine society (1997 2002)
title_full_unstemmed The ouster of President Joseph E. Estrada and its effects on Philippine society (1997 2002)
title_sort ouster of president joseph e. estrada and its effects on philippine society (1997 2002)
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2021
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etdb_history/1
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=etdb_history
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