Philippines Republic Acts (PDF)
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This document is a list of Republic Acts in the Philippines. It details various acts and laws enacted to protect the people. It covers topics such as consumer protection, safety guidelines, cybercrime, and more.
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1\. Policies are very important in a community or society. They serve as guides to protect the people. \- Republic Act No. 7394 (Consumer Act of the Philippines) 2\. Penalizes vehicle users who will not wear safety belts while on the road. \- Republic Act No. 8750 (Seat Belts Use Act of 1999) 3\...
1\. Policies are very important in a community or society. They serve as guides to protect the people. \- Republic Act No. 7394 (Consumer Act of the Philippines) 2\. Penalizes vehicle users who will not wear safety belts while on the road. \- Republic Act No. 8750 (Seat Belts Use Act of 1999) 3\. Supervises the legal production of cigarettes in the country. \- Republic Act No. 9211 (Tobacco Regulation Act of 2003) 4\. Protects children from any malicious acts online. \- Republic Act No. 8504 (Anti-Child Pornography Act) 5\. Consumer Act of the Philippines. \- Republic Act No. 7394 (Consumer Act of the Philippines) 6\. Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002. \- Republic Act No. 9165 (Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002) 7\. Anti-Hazing Law. \- Republic Act No. 8949 (Anti-Hazing Law) 8\. Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012. \- Republic Act No. 10175 (Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012) 9\. Tobacco Regulation Act of 2003. \- Republic Act No. 9211 (Tobacco Regulation Act of 2003) 10\. National Blood Services Act of 1994. \- Republic Act No. 7719 (National Blood Services Act of 1994) 11\. Traditional and Alternative Medicine Act of 1997. \- Republic Act No. 8423 (Traditional and Alternative Medicine Act of 1997) 12\. Responsible Parenthood and Reproductive Health Act of 2012. \- Republic Act No. 10354 (Responsible Parenthood and Reproductive Health Act of 2012) 13\. Philippine AIDS Prevention and Control Act of 1998. \- Republic Act No. 8504 (Philippine AIDS Prevention and Control Act of 1998) 14\. National Environmental Awareness and Education Act of 2008. \- Republic Act No. 9512 (National Environmental Awareness and Education Act of 2008) 15\. Seat Belts Use Act of 1999. \- Republic Act No. 8750 (Seat Belts Use Act of 1999) 1\. TECHNOLOGY-BASED ART - An artwork that is essentially computer-generated or manipulated. 2\. COMPUTER DIGITAL ART - Makes use of electronic and mechanical devices rather than the artist\'s own free hand to produce desired images and effects. 3\. MOBILE PHOTOGRAPHY - Gives birth to a new art form through photography using mobile devices. 4\. CGI (COMPUTER-GENERATED IMAGERY) - Application of computer graphics to create images in art, print media, video games, television programs, commercials, and videos. 5\. DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY - Captures, creates, edits, and shares digital images/photographs. 6\. VIDEO GAMES - Uses specialized electronic gaming devices, computers, or mobile devices for entertainment. 7\. COMPUTER DIGITAL ART - Employs computer software that drives devices (such as a plotter or printer) that take the place of the artist\'s hand. 8\. VIDEO TECHNOLOGY/IMAGING VIDEO - Provides a new platform for video materials targeting the \"netizens\" of today. 9\. MEDICAL/SCIENTIFIC IMAGING - A video technology for imaging videos in the fields of medicine and science. 10\. ANTONIO GORORDO - A 55-year-old digital artist who previously used traditional painting tools and techniques. 11\. ANINA RUBIO - A famous visual artist in the Philippines, muralist, and digital artist. 12\. JOHN-PIERRE HÉBERT - An independent artist known for drawing, mixed media, and algorithmic art. 13\. RONALD DAVIS - An American painter associated with abstract illusionism, geometric and lyrical abstraction, shaped canvas painting, color field painting, and hard-edge painting. 14\. LINE - The foundation of all drawings; the first and most versatile of the visual elements. 15\. VALUE - Created by the shadows and highlights within a piece of artwork from a light source, giving depth or a three-dimensional appearance. 1\. POPULAR MUSIC - It literally means \"Music of the Populace.\" 2\. AFROBEAT - Used to describe the fusion of Western African with Black American music. 3\. APALA - Used to wake up worshippers after fasting during the Muslim holy feast of Ramadan. 4\. AXE - A popular genre from Salvador, Bahia, and Brazil, fusing Afro-Caribbean styles like marcha and reggae, and played by carnival bands. 5\. JIT - A hard and fast percussive Zimbabwean dance music played on drums with guitar accompaniment, influenced by mbira-based guitar styles. 6\. JIVE - A popular form of South African music featuring a lively and uninhibited variation of the jitterbug, a form of swing dance. 7\. JUJU - A musical style from Nigeria that relies on traditional Yoruba rhythms, with instruments that are more Western in origin. 8\. KWASA KWASA - A dance style that began in Zaire in the late 1980s, popularized by Kanda Bongo Man. 9\. SALSA - Dance music from Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Colombia, composed of various genres like Cuban son montuno, guaracha, chachacha, mambo, and bolero. 10\. SAMBA - A Brazilian musical genre and style with roots traced to Africa via the West African slave trade and African religious traditions, especially in Angola and the Congo. 11\. SOCA - Also called the \"soul of calypso,\" originating as a fusion of calypso with Indian rhythms, combining the musical traditions of Trinidad and Tobago. 12\. WERE - Muslim music often performed as a wake-up call for early breakfast and prayers during Ramadan celebrations. 13\. ZOUK - A carnival-like rhythm from the Creole slang word for \"party,\" originating in the Caribbean islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique and popularized in the 1980s. 14\. MUSIC OF AFRICA - Music plays an important role in the daily lives of Africans, used for work, religion, ceremonies, or communication.