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  • 高杉 公人
    関西学院大学先端社会研究所紀要
    2012年 7 巻 33-48
    発行日: 2012年
    公開日: 2021/05/15
    ジャーナル フリー
    本研究では、フィリピンの先住民族タグバヌア族コミュニティにおける内発的発展型社会開発の可能性を探る為に、タグバヌア族自身が文化を再発見し、それを強みとしてコミュニティを発展させることを目的とした「文化再発見型アクションリサーチ」を実施した。アクションリサーチとして、長老の歴史を聴いて書き残す「ライフヒストリーリスニング&ライティングトレーニング(LHLWT)」、フィールドワークで発見された植物の活用法を分析して、将来の農業開発を考える「農業再発見フィールドワーク」、長老とのディスカッションを通じて現在の海産物の活用を再考し、経済発展と海洋資源保 全を模索する「持続可能な漁業開発再考ワークショップ」、という3つのアクションを複合的に実施し、その結果をトライアンギュレーションして分析・考察した。その結果、伝統的な農法や漁業のプロダクトの活用等、失われつつある文化的価値を先住民族の若者が再発見して後世に残す重要性を確認し、それを将来的なコミュニティ発展に繋げるきっかけ となる動きが見られた。更に外部者である研究者や学生が、文化を強みとしてコミュニティを内発的に発展させるプロジェクトの後方支援を行い、文化を基軸とした内発的発展を促す可能性も示唆された。
  • 藤井 琢磨, 立川 浩之, 横地 洋之
    タクサ:日本動物分類学会誌
    2018年 44 巻 52-57
    発行日: 2018/02/28
    公開日: 2018/03/20
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス

    Leptoseris amitoriensis Veron, 1990 is recorded on the basis of specimens from the southern coast of Amami-oshima Island, Kagoshima, Japan. The colonies of L. amitoriensis was found on the bottom edge of a sandy slope at 31 m depth in Atetsu Bay, Oshima Strait. The paratypes examined in this study (CMNH-ZG 08451, RUMF-ZG-04388 and RUMF-ZG-04389: collected by one of the author of this study) appear to make up the entire type series to the exception of the holotype. The feature that corallite rims are slightly raised compared to the coenosteum was observed in both the specimens in this study and the paratypes, and this is considered to be an additional diagnostic character of this species. This report represents the northernmost record of this species and the second record in Japan.

  • 小林 大純
    Ichthy, Natural History of Fishes of Japan
    2023年 28 巻 36-41
    発行日: 2023/01/24
    公開日: 2023/01/25
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス
  • 大隅 紀和
    教育情報研究
    1996年 12 巻 2 号 49-56
    発行日: 1996/11/30
    公開日: 2017/05/31
    ジャーナル フリー
  • 笠井 信利, 種市 雅彦
    日本航海学会誌 NAVIGATION
    2020年 212 巻 74-83
    発行日: 2020年
    公開日: 2020/05/09
    研究報告書・技術報告書 フリー
  • ――19世紀末マニラの帝国医療に焦点を当てて
    千葉 芳広
    東南アジア -歴史と文化-
    2018年 2018 巻 47 号 5-31
    発行日: 2018年
    公開日: 2020/06/01
    ジャーナル フリー

    This paper discusses the emergence of Filipino physicians in the Spanish Philippines, focusing on Manila in the late 19th century. The purpose is to consider the historical significance of the medical profession for Filipino society.

    The native wealthy people emerged in the 19th century as further an increased quantity of the agricultural products was exported to the world market. They formed an educated wealthy class called Ilustrados which led to the Propaganda Movement, being the basis of the Philippine Revolution. Filipino physicians also were among them and, simultaneously, occupied a part of the medical officers such as Médico Titular and Médico Municipal in the late 19th century.

    In the late 19th century, the various governmental organs involved in health care were administratively consolidated, subsuming the Central Committee of Vaccine, the Office of Marine Quarantine and the Médicos Titulares. At the same time, both medicine and welfare in governmental services were connected in the Médicos Municipales by whom free medical services were provided for the poor, in Manila and its suburbs. Such state medicine was launched under the Spanish empire which had been interdependent with the Catholic Church.

    The Spanish was given priority in the employment of those medical officers. However, Filipino physicians who obtained the medical licenses from the University of Santo Tomas increased up to the 1890s. Public Pharmacists and vaccinators were also taught at the University of Santo Tomas. On the other hand, through the cholera epidemics in the 1880s and the Philippine Revolution in 1896, some Spanish physicians asked to resign from their own posts and return to Spain. The employment of Spanish and Filipino physicians largely oscillated in the 1890s.

    Those physicians dealt with infectious diseases, based on practical use of miasma theory and bacteriology. Regarding cholera, these physicians stressed both prevention and disinfection. As a method of medical treatment, the purgative was, characteristically, administered to cholera patients in cases of abdominal pain and diarrhea. In general, their medical practices were mainly given at patients’ homes, with a treatment of native medicinal plants. Such native medicine hadn’t been separated from Spanish imperial medicine. But, at that time, all Filipino physicians didn’t necessarily follow the medicine promoted by the Spanish empire. For example, one Filipino physician thought that the Spanish medical dignitary not only fell behind western medical science of those days, but also misunderstood native medicine. On the other hand, this physician admired Filipinos’ own medicine. Such critical views against Spanish imperial medicine were succeeded in American colonial times and confronted American medical officers.

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