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About Staff:Before FY2004

Patricio Nunez ABINALES

Past research experience
  1. Lecturer, Department of Filipino and Philippine Literature, University of the Philippines, 1979-88
  2. Research Associate, Third World Studies Center, University of the Philippines, 1980-85
  3. Instructor, Department of Filipino and Philippine Literature, University of the Philippines, 1982-83
  4. Deputy Director for Administration, Third World Studies Center, University of the Philippines, 1986-88
  5. Lecturer, Department of Political Science, University of the Philippines, 1987-88
  6. Teaching Assistant, Cornell University, 1989-93
  7. Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Ohio University, 1994-98
  8. Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Ohio University, 1998-99
  9. Joined CSEAS as Associate Professor in 1999
Major Publications
  1. Salipada Pendatun and Muslim Elite Politics in Pre-Martial Law Cotabato, Part 1 and Part 2. Kinaadman (Wisdom): A Journal of the Southern Philippines 18(4), 1996; 19(1), 1997.
  2. The Revolution Falters: The Left in Philippine Politics after 1986 (ed.). Ithaca, N. Y.: Cornell University Southeast Asia Program, 1996. Contributed the essay, “When the Revolution Devours Its Children before Victory: Operasyong Kampanyang Ahos and the Breakdown of Mindanao Communism.”
  3. State Building, Communist Insurgency and Cacique Politics in the Philippines. In Counter-insurgent States: Guerrilla Warfare and State-Building in the Twentieth Century, ed. by Paul B. Rich and Richard Stubbs. New York and London: MacMillan, 1997
  4. Images of State Power: Essays on Philippine Politics from the Margins. Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press, 1998
  5. The “Muslim-Filipino” and the Philippine State. Public Policy (A University of the Philippines Quarterly), 1998
  6. “Muslim” Political Brokers and the Philippine Nation-State. In Gangsters, Democracy and the State in Southeast Asia, ed. by Carl J. Trocki. Ithaca, N. Y.: Cornell University Southeast Asia Program, 1998
  7. Filipino Marxism and the National Question. Filipinas (A Journal of Philippine Studies, Special Issue on Post-War Filipino Nationalisms, co-edited with Benito M. Vergara, Jr.) 32, 1999
  8. From Orang Besar to Colonial Big Men: Datu Piang of the Magindanaos and the American Colonial State. In Lives at the Margin: Biographies of Obscured Filipinos, ed. by Alfred W. McCoy. Madison: Center for Southeast Asian Studies, University of Wisconsin, 1999 and Ateneo de Manila University Press, 2000
  9. Making Mindanao: Cotabato and Davao in the Formation of the Philippine Nation-State. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 2000
  10. Fellow Traveler: Essays on Filipino Communism. Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press, 2001
  11. An American Colonial State: Authority and Structure in Southern Mindanao. In Vestiges of War: The Philippine-American War and the Aftermath of an Imperial Dream, ed. by Angel Velasco Shaw and Luis H. Francia. N. Y.: New York University Press, 2002
  12. American Rule and the Formation of Filipino “Colonial Nationalism.” SEAS 39(4), 2002
  13. Pag-ibig, Pagtatalik, Pakikibaka: Love and Sexuality in the Communist Party of the Philippines. In Southeast Asia Over Three Generations, ed. by Benedict R'OG Anderson, James T. Siegel and Audrey R. Kahin. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Southeast Asia Program, 2003
  14. Progressive-Machine Conflict in Early Twentieth Century American Politics and Colonial State-building in the Philippines. In The American Colonial State in the Philippines, ed. by Julian Go and Anne Foster. Duke University Press, 2003
  15. The Philippines: Dilemmas of Renewed Security Ties, Great Decisions (Foreign Policy Association), Anniversary edition, 2004
  16. The Enigma of the “Popular Will”: Reflections on the Philippine Senate, I Magazine (Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism), May 2004
  17. Women, Islam and the Law. Kyoto Review of Southeast Asia. Issue No. 5. (Islam in Southeast Asia), March 2004, (http://kyotoreview.cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp/issue/issue4/)
  18. The Good Imperialists? American Military Presence in the Southern Philippines in Historical Perspective. Philippine Studies 52, 2004
  19. Love, Sex and the Filipino Communist. Manila: Anvil Publishing, 2004
  20. State and Society in the Philippines. Maryland, U.S.A.: Rowman and Littlefield, 2005
  21.