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	<title>Institute for Solidarity in Asia &#187; road map</title>
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	<description>Making Governance a Shared Responsibility</description>
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		<title>30 percent poverty reduction aim of cities&#8217; league</title>
		<link>http://isacenter.org/articles/30-percent-poverty-reduction-aim-of-cities-league/</link>
		<comments>http://isacenter.org/articles/30-percent-poverty-reduction-aim-of-cities-league/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Jan 2011 01:26:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lcp]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[league of cities of the philippines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[road map]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Central Luzon Desk, Philippine Daily Inquirer Posted date: December 30, 2010 CITY OF SAN FERNANDO, Philippines – The League of Cities of the Philippines (LCP) targets to help lower poverty incidence by 30 percent across 122 cities in the country in three to six years.This goal topped the LCP road map which has been aligned ]]></description>
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<td>Central Luzon Desk, Philippine Daily Inquirer</td>
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<td>Posted date: December 30, 2010</td>
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<td>CITY OF SAN FERNANDO, Philippines – The League of Cities of the Philippines (LCP) targets to help lower poverty incidence by 30 percent across 122 cities in the country in three to six years.This goal topped the LCP road map which has been aligned with the thrust of President Aquino to improve quality of life and foster good governance and unity, Alaminos City Mayor Hernani Braganza, LCP secretary general, said in a statement.</p>
<p>The LCP adopted the road map during the 45th National Executive Board meeting in Tagbilaran City recently. Budget Secretary Florencio Abad and representatives of Vice President Jejomar Binay in the Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council and its attached agencies attended the meeting.</p>
<p>In the same statement, Mayor Oscar Rodriguez of San Fernando, Pampanga, the LCP president, said the road map’s action plans sought to enable city governments to “increase their significant contribution to the national economy.”</p>
<p>Rodriguez said the ways to do that are strengthening the capability of city governments to make policies, ensure the welfare of their constituents and undertake leadership reforms.</p>
<p>“Our road map is proof that the LCP is serious in its resolve&#8230; [to] lobby for the best interest of its members and the members’ constituents, and to provide support services to enable all cities become effective engines of growth and significant contributors to nation building,” Braganza said.</p>
<p>Within the LCP, there will be an exchange of information in the implementation of the Performance Governance System to be monitored by its proponent, Institute for Solidarity in Asia (ISA), said Dagupan Mayor Benjamin Lim, LCP treasurer.</p>
<p>The ISA is headed by former Finance Secretary Jesus Estanislao.</p>
<p>The Performance Governance System, which is practiced by 35 cities and several national agencies, uses a balanced scorecard that was designed by the Harvard Business School. Used also by top-performing corporations in the world, the scorecard shows how strategies will be executed by various departments and members of an organization to attain specific targets within a time frame.</p>
<p>The LCP board directors will meet monthly to compare legislative agenda and strengthen partnership with the national government through dialogues with agencies.</td>
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		<title>Beyond 2016</title>
		<link>http://isacenter.org/articles/beyond-2016/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Jan 2010 12:29:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Louie</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[good governance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[philippines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[road map]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Dr. Jesus P. Estanislao, Chairman, Institute for Solidarity in Asia Further building our nation and bringing about genuine development to our people would take us a few Administrations, perhaps at least a generation or even more. Thus, while understandably we focus on the next six years, we should also allow our vision to stretch way ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Dr. Jesus P. Estanislao, Chairman, Institute for Solidarity in Asia</strong></p>
<p>Further building our nation and bringing about genuine development to our people would take us a few Administrations, perhaps at least a generation or even more. Thus, while understandably we focus on the next six years, we should also allow our vision to stretch way beyond 2016, at the very least up to 2030.</p>
<p><span id="more-309"></span></p>
<p>Our vision that we should aim to realize by 2030 should enable us to put behind us one of the deepest problems we have yet to resolve, that of greater national cohesion and national unity. The <strong>Vision for Philippines 2030 </strong>is put forward as follows: <strong>Isang Sambayanang may Kapunuan ng Buhay, </strong>i.e. one community with a fullness of life, with special accent and emphasis on “one”. This underscores the dream we ought to realize as a people some 20 years from now&#8212;one nation <em>with responsible citizens who deeply love their motherland</em>. Thus, as we love to repeat rather often: Isang baying maka-Diyos at Isang lahing maka-bayan, i.e. one people <em>with strong democratic institutions effectively working for the common good.</em></p>
<p>We still have to become one national community, one nation, and one people! This demands of all of us <em>responsible citizenship</em>, which makes us identify our nation’s affairs as our very own, our nation’s problems as ours to solve, and our nation’s progress as ours to achieve. This identification with the fate, fortune, progress, and development of our people is how we show deep love for our motherland, and that love needs to be shown in deeds of generosity, selflessness, and commitment to the common good every hour of each week, or as we say nowadays, 24/7.</p>
<p>The exercise of responsible citizenship, which is a duty on the part of all, without any exception whatsoever, is best done through democratic institutions. Institutions take our focus way beyond mere personalities, who necessarily have to leave and pass away from whichever part of the national stage they may occupy for a time. They make us focus on those instruments of a democracy that need to endure: these are the ones that last; they stay from one generation to the next; moreover, they need to be strengthened and made more effective with the passage of time. This task of strengthening democratic institutions is an immediate challenge we need to rise up to, most especially in the next two decades.</p>
<p>It is through our democratic institutions that each one of us is called upon to work effectively for <em>the common good </em>of and in our motherland. Again, the focus should be way beyond self, i.e. beyond ego, beyond immediate family and close relations, and even beyond narrower geographical circumscriptions such as municipalities, provinces, cities, and regions. Rather, our focus should be on what each one of us can do, and what our respective families, municipalities, provinces, and cities can contribute to the general welfare and genuine development of our country, our Inang Bayan. This is a clear invitation for our spirits to soar beyond narrow boundaries and reach national heights, because the nation is our motherland, and we have to give due respect to, and take great care of, our country&#8212;our motherland! No one else will.</p>
<p>Strengthening our “democratic institutions” as part of our vision to actualize in the next 20 years would give flesh to what we should continuously be pursuing as part of our mission, that of securing for ourselves and our posterity the “blessings of independence and democracy”. Furthermore, getting every one of us, as responsible citizens, to work “effectively for the common good” as part of our vision up to 2030 would also tie in very well with what we have to keep pursuing as part of our mission, that of “promoting the common good” and of “conserving and developing our patrimony”.</p>
<p>Once again, we have consistency, in this instance between our continuing, permanent mission as a people and our more concrete vision to actualize by 2030.</p>
<p>Manila, January 19, 2010</p>
<p>From his column, &#8220;Swimming against the Current,&#8221;</p>
<p>Manila Bulletin</p>
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