Filipino political scientist and novelist
Maximo Manguiat Kalaw (20 May 1891 – March 23, 1954) was a Filipino political scientist and novelist.[ 2] He was the first Filipino head of the Department of Political Science at the University of the Philippines .[ 3] [ 4] [ 5] He argued for Filipino independence from the United States.[ 6]
He was born in the town of Lipa, Batangas , in the Philippines.[ 7] He was the brother of Teodoro Kalaw .[ 7] He studied at the University of Washington and Georgetown University .[ 7] In 1924, he received a PhD from the University of Michigan .[ 7]
References
^ District dissolved into the two-seat Batangas's at-large district for the National Assembly (Second Philippine Republic) .
^ Benson, Eugene; Conolly, L. W. (2004-11-30). Encyclopedia of Post-Colonial Literatures in English . Routledge. p. 1142. ISBN 978-1-134-46848-5 .
^ Agpalo, Remigio E. (1990-12-01). "The Political Science of Dr. Maximo M. Kalaw" . Philippine Political Science Journal . 16 (31–32): 21–38. doi :10.1080/01154451.1990.9754162 . ISSN 0115-4451 .
^ Joseph Ponce, Martin (2012), "The Romantic Didactics of Maximo Kalaw's Nationalism" , Beyond the Nation , NYU Press, doi :10.18574/nyu/9780814768051.001.0001 , ISBN 978-0-8147-6805-1
^ Willoughby, W. W. (1923). "Philippine Government. By George A. Malcolm and Maximo M. Kalaw. (D. C. Heath and Company: New York. 1923. Pp. xxiv, 373.)" . American Political Science Review . 17 (4): 654–655. doi :10.2307/1943768 . ISSN 0003-0554 . JSTOR 1943768 . S2CID 147262054 .
^ Hoganson, Kristin L.; Sexton, Jay (2020-01-03). Crossing Empires: Taking U.S. History into Transimperial Terrain . Duke University Press. ISBN 978-1-4780-0743-2 .
^ a b c d "Dr. Maximo Kalaw: the other Great Kalaw of Lipa during the American Colonial Era - Batangas History, Culture and Folklore" . www.batangashistory.date . Retrieved 2022-01-15 .