Aileen Baviera

Aileen San Pablo Baviera (August 26, 1959 – March 21, 2020) was a Filipino political scientist and sinologist. She was one of the leading China experts in her country.[1][2]

Aileen Baviera
Baviera speaks at the Maritime Security Symposium of the Development Academy of the Philippines, July 4, 2016
Personal details
Born
Aileen San Pablo

(1959-08-26)August 26, 1959
Manila, Philippines
DiedMarch 21, 2020(2020-03-21) (aged 60)
San Lazaro Hospital, Manila, Philippines
Cause of deathPneumonia induced by COVID-19
NationalityFilipino
Spouse(s)Jorge Villegas Baviera (d. 2018)
Children3
ResidenceQuezon City
Alma materUniversity of the Philippines Diliman
Beijing University
OccupationProfessor, political scientist, sinologist
Known forExpert of Sino-Philippine relations

Career

In October 1979, Baviera received a Bachelor of Science in Foreign Service, cum laude at the University of the Philippines. As a student of modern Chinese history at the University of Beijing, she was allowed to do research in China for the first time from 1981 to 1983. She learned the Chinese language, received a diploma from the Beijing Language Institute and traveled to the north and west of the country. In 1987, Baviera received a Master of Arts in Asian studies, specializing in China and East Asia. The doctorate in political science followed in 2003.[3] Before living in China, she was a leftist, but during her time there she "learned to recognize and shun the shallowness of political propaganda when I saw it, Mao’s as much as Marcos’s".[4]

From 1980 to 1986, she worked as a researcher and trainer at the Foreign Service Institute of the State Department. Until 1990, she taught at the Faculty of Political Science at the University of the Philippines and then until 1993 as a research coordinator at the Philippine-China Development Resource Center. From June 1993 to May 1998, Baviera was head of the Center for International Relations and Strategic Studies of the Foreign Service Institute and taught parallel from 1996 to 1997 at the Faculty of Political Science of the Ateneo de Manila University.[3]

From June 1998 to December 2001, Baviera was Executive Director of the Philippine-China Development Resource Center and at the same time until June 2005 Associate Professor at the University of the Philippines Asian Center. From September 2003 to October 2009, she was also Dean of the Asian Center. From July 2005, she was full professor and from July 2010 chief editor for Asian Politics & Policy of the Policy Studies Organization in Washington, D.C.[3] Most recently, she was President and CEO of the Asia Pacific Pathways to Progress Foundation.[1]

Death

On the morning of March 21, 2020, Baviera died of pneumonia caused by the COVID-19 at the San Lazaro Hospital, Manila.[1] She contracted the disease on March 12, when she returned after participating in a security conference in Paris, France.[2] She was one of two Filipino delegates – the other being Alan T. Ortiz – who were exposed to the disease at the conference and later succumbed to it.[5]

She was the widow of Jorge Villegas Baviera, who died in 2018,[6][7] and had three children.

Publications (selection)

  • Contemporary Political Attitudes and Behavior of the Chinese in Metro Manila, 1994.
  • Regional Security in East Asia: Challenges to Cooperation and Community Building, 2008.
gollark: GPS is probably easiest. I think you can get very cheap GPS modules, and the satellites have good clocks.
gollark: I think just general todo lists?
gollark: https://github.com/F5OEO/rpitx
gollark: Raspberry Pis can apparently transmit around 100MHz using some sort of clock hardware.
gollark: If you have more money, you can *buy* space.

References

  1. Rappler: U.P. professor, China expert Aileen Baviera dies of coronavirus, 21 March 2020, abgerufen am 21. März 2020.
  2. Rappler: Aileen Baviera, 60: Her eyes were on China, her heart stayed with PH, 21. März 2020, abgerufen am 21. März 2020.
  3. University of the Philippines: Aileen Baviera, abgerufen am 21. März 2020.
  4. Paddock, Richard C. (April 9, 2020). "Aileen Baviera, Leading Philippines Scholar of China, Dies at 60". The New York Times. Retrieved April 10, 2020.
  5. Severino, Howie (May 4, 2020). "Howie Severino: Remembering four friends, victims of COVID-19". GMA News and Public Affairs. Retrieved May 12, 2020.
  6. "Dr. Aileen Baviera: Clear-eyed China watcher succumbs to COVID-19". GMA News Online. Retrieved March 22, 2020.
  7. Ramos, Mariejo S. "Esteemed UP prof and 'China watcher' succumbs to COVID-19". newsinfo.inquirer.net. Retrieved March 22, 2020.
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