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  1. Jose P. Laurel

    Jose P. Laurel

    President of the Philippines from 1943 to 1945

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  1. José P. Laurel (born March 9, 1891, Tanauan, Luzon, Philippines—died November 6, 1959, Manila) was a Filipino lawyer, politician, and jurist, who served as president of the Philippines (1943–45) during the Japanese occupation during World War II.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. José Paciano Laurel y García CCLH KGCR (March 9, 1891 – November 6, 1959) was a Filipino politician, lawyer, and judge, who served as the President of the Japanese-occupied Second Philippine Republic, a puppet state during World War II, from 1943 to 1945.

  3. Apr 14, 2020 · Jose P. Laurel programs implemented. Jose P. Laurel was the president of the Second Philippine Republic, popularly known as the Japanese puppet state. He was elected to the Philippine Senate in 1925, where he was able to sponsor the Bill of Rights and the establishment of the Commonwealth of the Philippines.

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  4. Eschewing the issue of collaboration that tends to obscure and dismiss Laurel, this article analyzes Laurel's philosophical negotiation with. empire and reconstructs his embedded positions on the Orient/"Asia,"1 nation. and race, universalism and civilization, and imperialism and Pan-Asianism.

  5. Mar 23, 2011 · 1. Jose Paciano Laurel was born on March 9, 1891, at Tanauan, Batangas Province, and he died on November 6, 1959. Married in 1912, he was the father of nine children. He received an LL.B. degree in 1915 from the University of the Philippines, a D.C.L. degree from Yale in 1920, and an LL.D. honoris causa from Tokyo Imperial University in 1938.

    • David Steinberg
    • 1965
  6. Oct 21, 2021 · He also promoted programs to directly help common citizens under Japanese occupation, such as repurposing land for agricultural purposes, making a Filipino-only food bank (as agricultural output was sequestered by the Japanese war machine) and transferring Philippine industries from Japanese military control back into Philippine civil hands.

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  8. Jose P. Laurel Inaugural Program (1943) Malacañang Museum. To prove the sincerity of the Japanese Empire to grant the Philippines its independence after it has successfully waged war...

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