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  • ICNC Glossary of Key Terms - Filipino/Tagalog

ICNC Glossary of Key Terms - Filipino/Tagalog

The first step in creating high-quality translations in the field of civil resistance is translating key terms.

Initially, we developed a list of 91 key terms that had specific meaning in the field of civil resistance and worked with translators to translate these terms. We have subsequently expanded this list to 159 terms, and ICNC President Hardy Merriman and ICNC Senior Advisor Nicola Barrach have produced a glossary (to be published in 2019) that defines each of these terms and provides commentary on each and examples of usage.

You can see standardized translations of key terms in Filipino/Tagalog below.
 

English Filipino/Tagalog Comments
1 Accommodation
(as a result of civil resistance)
2 Accommodate
(as a result of civil resistance)
3 Accountability pananagutan
4 Activist aktibista
5 Adversary
6 Agency
(human agency)
(A) shorthand: kakayahan/kapangyarihan; (B) phrase/longer: kakayahang magdulot ng pagbabago/kakayahang mamili/kakayahan sa malayang pagkilos In social science, agency is the capacity of individuals to make their own free choices, to act independently, and to influence change.
7 Agent provocateur
8 Ally
(verb)
9 Ally
(noun)
10 Alternative institutions mga alternatibong institusyon Unofficial institutions created by people in a nonviolent campaign. Sometimes the purpose of the institution is entirely new, sometimes it is to replace or substitute for an already existing official institution, and sometimes the purpose is to directly support the execution of nonviolent tactics. Alternative institutions may be developed to undermine institutions of official power holders, to increase the capacity and self-reliance of the nonviolent movement, and/or to provide a social, economic or political services that official institutions are not providing effectively.
11 Authoritarian rule panunungkulang awtoritaryan A government in which the ruler (or ruling party/small elite) governs in a way that enables them to exercise their decisions without institutional restraint, and without regard for popular will.
12 Authority awtoridad
13 Backlash pagbalik napasama/bumalik napasama An unintended and undesired negative reaction to certain actions by either side in a conflict whereby the side that took action loses sympathy or support and the other side gains sympathy or support. Often, backlash causes third parties or sections of the population that were previously not involved or neutral in the conflict to become more actively involved in supporting one side or another.
14 Backfire
(verb)
sablay / pagpalpak A situation in which a plan or action rebounds adversely on the originator and has the opposite effect to what was intended. The definition of the term “backlash” is very similar to the term “backfire”. The term “backlash” tends to be used to refer to a strong negative reaction to either the movement or the movement’s opponent. The term “backfire” almost always refers to when repression against a civil resistance movement hurts the movement’s opponent. It is rarely used to refer to when violence or statements by a movement hurt the movement.
15 Backfire
(noun)
16 Banners mga bandila
17 Blockade
(associated with civil resistance)
(noun)
pagbangkulong An action by nonviolent means to prevent people and goods from accessing a given location. Blockades may be established by objects (such as parked cars, or boats [in the case of a naval blockade], construction of structures (such as walls) or a mass of people, who may be sitting, standing, or lying down.
18 Blockade
(associated with civil resistance)
(verb)
19 Boycott
(noun)
boykoteo
20 Boycott
(verb)
21 Campaign
(associated with civil resistance)
(noun)
mga kampanya
22 Campaign
(verb)
23 Capacity kapasidad
24 Civil disobedience panlipunang pagsuway An active and professed nonviolent violation of particular laws, decrees, regulations, ordinances, military or police commands and other orders. This is usually done against laws or orders which are regarded as immoral, unjust, or tyrannical and with the expectation and acceptance by the perpetrator(s) of being punished. Civil disobedience is a protest against a particular law, even though sometimes a particular law may be disobeyed as a symbol of opposition to wider policies of the government or the government’s rule itself.
25 Civil resistance panlipunang pagtanggi A technique through which people in a society wage collective nonviolent struggle for political, economic, or social objectives without physical violence.
26 Civil society mga organisasyong sibil A civil society is comprised of groups and organizations working in the interest of a society’s citizens but operating outside of the governmental and for-profit sectors.
27 Civilian-based defense
28 Coalition
29 Commission,
tactic(s) or act(s) of
30 Concentration,
tactic(s) of
31 Conditions
32 Consent
(political)
pahintulot/pagsang-ayon The permission or agreement (obtained from an individual or an entity having authority or power) to do something or to allow something to happen.
33 Consent
(political)
(verb)
34 Conflict
(noun)
labanan / sagupaan / hindi pagkakasundo
35 Constructive programme
(or “constructive program”)
36 Conversion
37 Coup d’etat
(or “coup”)
kudeta
38 Crackdown
(noun)
pagsugpo Severe measures (usually by an authority) to stop or discourage people or behavior that is considered undesirable or illegal.
39 Crackdown
(verb)
40 Defect
(associated with civil resistance)
(verb)
41 Defection pagtiwalag
42 Demonstration
43 Dictatorship diktadurya
44 Dilemma action
45 Direct action
46 Disintegration
(associated with civil resistance)
47 Dispersion, tactics of
48 Disrupt
49 Dissent
(noun)
50 Dissident hindi sumasang-ayon A person who has contrary opinions and takes contrary actions to those of the political order and society in which he or she lives.
51 Disruption pagkaputol When a process or activity is unable to continue in the normal way: the normal progress of a process or activity is interrupted
52 Dynamics
(of civil resistance)
dinamika
(ng panlipunang pagtanggi)
The complex general process and interplay of forces in the operation of civil resistance (or nonviolent action, nonviolent conflict, or related terms) during a conflict, where a civil resistance movement is trying to achieve its objectives despite the opponents’ counter-actions.
53 Empower
54 Empowerment
55 Escalate
(in conflict)
(verb)
56 Escalation
(in conflict)
(noun)
57 External actor
58 External support panlabas na suporta
59 Failure
(associated with civil resistance)
60 Frame
(communication)
(verb)
61 Frame
(communication)
(noun)
62 Freedom
(political)
kalayaan A political condition in which individuals have maximum opportunities for choice in decision important to their lives and society and for personal and social development, and in which individuals and groups have a high degree of opportunity to participate in and make an impact on the operation of the society and the political system and shaping its future.
63 Freedom of Assembly
64 Freedom of Association
65 Freedom of Speech
(or freedom of expression)
kalayaan sa pananalita
66 Goal
67 Grassroots
(adjective)
ordinaryo at lokal na mamamayan
68 Grassroots
(noun)
69 Grand strategy pangmatagalang istratehiya The broadest conception of how an objective is to be attained in a conflict by a chosen course of action. The grand strategy serves to coordinate and direct all appropriate and available resources (human, political, economic, moral, etc.) of the group to attain its objectives in a conflict.
70 Grievances karaingan
71 Human rights defender
(HRD)
72 Leadership
73 Legitimacy lehitimo
74 Loyalty shift
75 Mass demonstration malawakang demonstrasyon
76 Mechanisms of change
77 Methods of nonviolent action pamamaraan ng di-marahas na pagkilos
78 March(es) mga martsa
79 Mobilization
80 Mobilizing nakapagpapakilos To organize and encourage a group of people to take collective action in pursuit of a particular objective.
81 Movement kilusan
82 Non-state actor
83 Nonviolent
(or non-violent)
di-marahas
84 Noncooperation pagmamatigas The deliberate restriction, discontinuance, or withholding of social, economic, or political cooperation (or a combination of these) with a disapproved person, activity, institution, or government. Noncooperation constitutes a large class of methods of nonviolent action
85 Nonviolent action di-marahas na kilos A technique through which people in a society wage collective nonviolent struggle for political, economic, or social objectives without physical violence. This technique consists of: (a) acts of commission (such as protests, symbolic actions, nonviolent blockades and occupations); (b) acts of omission (such as strikes, boycotts, civil disobedience, and other forms of noncooperation); or (c) a combination of both.
86 Nonviolent coercion di-marahas na pagpilit
87 Nonviolent conflict di-marahas na salungatan
88 Nonviolent direct action
89 Nonviolent discipline di-marahas na disiplina
90 Nonviolence
(religious, ethical, etc.)
di-karahasan
91 Nonviolent intervention di-marahas na pakikialam A large class of methods of nonviolent action which in a conflict situation directly interfere by nonviolent means with the opponent’s’ activities and operation of their system. These methods are distinguished from both symbolic protests and noncooperation. The disruptive intervention is most often physical (as in a sit-in) but may be psychological, social, economic, or political.
92 Nonviolent struggle di-marahas na pakikihamok The waging of determined conflict by strong forms of nonviolent action, especially against determined and resourceful opponents who may respond with repression.
93 Obedience pagtalima
94 Obey
95 Objective
(noun)
96 Omission,
act(s) or tactic(s) of
97 Opponents katunggali
98 Opposition groups mga grupong katunggali
99 Organizer taga-organisa
100 Parallel institution katumbas/kahanay na institusyon
101 People of support
102 Pillars of support mga suhay / mga saligan na sumusuporta sa… The institutions and sections of the society which supply the existing regime with the needed sources of power to maintain and expand its power capacity.
103 Plan
(noun)
104 Plan
(verb)
105 Political defiance politikang pagsalansanig
106 Political ju-jitsu politikang ju-jitsu
107 Political noncooperation di-pakikisamang politikal
108 Political power kapangyarihang pampolitika
109 People power lakas ng bayan
110 Power
111 Power holder
112 Planning pagpaplano
113 Pragmatic nonviolence wais’/’praktikal’ (di-marahas na pagkilos) add Filipino definition as footnote “To deal with or address an issue or problem in a reasonable and logical way instead of depending on ideas and theories. In civil resistance, we refer to pragmatic nonviolence to describe a movement’s choice of remaining nonviolent and using nonviolent tactics on the basis of recognizing its multiple strategic advantages and not on moral, religious or other spiritual grounds.”
114 Protest
(noun)
protesta
115 Protest
(verb)
116 Rally
(noun)
117 Resistance movement kilusang lumalaban A widespread, and usually informally interrelated, network of individuals, informal groups, institutions, and resistance groups engaged in planned or spontaneous resistance. The resistance may be directed against an established government, political system, social patterns, institutions, usurpation regime, or military occupation administration.
118 Repress
119 Repression pagkakasupil
120 Resilience kabanatan
121 Revolution
(social, political, or economic)
122 Sanctions mga kapahintulutan
123 Self-determination
124 Self-organize
125 Self-organization sarilinang pag-oorganisa Process through which some order or coordination arises out of the will and activity other than the official institution or government. In civil resistance this may refer to the process that sees the birth of a movement or the procurement of goods and services.
126 Self-reliance tiwala sa sariling kakayahan
127 Skills
(in civil resistance context)
mga kasanayan
128 Sources of power mga bukal ng kapangyarihan
129 Strategic nonviolent struggle estratehiya ng di-marahas na paghamok
130 Semi-authoritarian rule
131 Self-rule sariling panunungkulan The process or condition in which members of a group, population, institution or nation themselves determine and administer the policies relevant to them.
132 Sit-in (you can use “sit-in” in itself as it is a long-used term by Filipino movements; otherwise)
okupasyon
The physical occupation of certain facilities by persons engaging in nonviolent intervention by sitting on available chairs, stools, and occasionally on the floor, for a limited or indefinite person.
133 Student Strikes welga ng mga mag-aaral
134 Strategic plan estratehikong plano
135 Strategize
136 Strategy estratehiya
137 Strike
(noun)
welga
138 Strike
(associated with civil resistance)
(verb)
139 Structural conditions
(see also conditions)
kundisyong struktural
140 Success pagtatagumpay
141 Tactic taktika
142 Tactical innovation
143 Tactics of commission taktika ukol sa mga gagawin
144 Tactics of concentration
(see also Concenration, tactics of)
taktika ukol sa pagtutuunang-pansin
145 Tactics of dispersion
(see also Dispersion, tactics of)
taktika ukol sa pagpapalaganap A tactic of nonviolent action in which participants are dispersed, and do not perform the action in the same place, and not necessarily at the same time.
146 Tactics of omission taktika ukol sa iiwasan/hindi gagawin
147 Tactical sequencing pagsasalansan/pagsasaayos ng mga taktika / taktika ukol sa daloy ng mga pagkilos
148 Third party
(or “third-party”)
149 Train
150 Training pagsasanay
151 Unarmed Insurrection di-armadong pakikibaka A popular revolt by a population that has previously submitted to the government or system, but which now repudiates it by nonviolent struggle.
152 Unite
153 Unity pagkakaisa
154 Uprising pag-aalsa
155 Violence
156 Violent Flank marahas na kahanay
157 Vision
(of a civil resistance movement)
pananaw
158 Walk-out
(or “walkout”)
(noun)
baklasan / pagbaklas
159 Walk-out
(verb)

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