The launch marks the culmination of an international conference, but the real story was the life it celebrated: a Kagay-anon social scientist who spent 54 yearsThe launch marks the culmination of an international conference, but the real story was the life it celebrated: a Kagay-anon social scientist who spent 54 years

Xavier U launches fund honoring one of Mindanao’s pioneering social scientists

2026/03/07 10:00
5 min read
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CAGAYAN DE ORO, Philippines – For decades, Dr. Magdalena Cabaraban trained generations of students in research methods, survey analysis, statistics, and gender studies, instilling in them the principle that scholarship must not just serve journals but serve communities.

Over a year after the pioneering Kagay-anon social scientist passed away, the Jesuit-run Xavier University-Ateneo de Cagayan opened a new chapter in the life of social science in Mindanao.

One of its conference rooms buzzed with conversation, papers rustling, and cameras clicking as academics, policymakers, and family members gathered for the launch of the Dr. Magdalena Canag Cabaraban Memorial Fund on Friday, March 6.

The ceremony marked the culmination of the two-day 2026 International Scientific Conference of the Philippine Population Association (PPA), but the real story was the life it celebrated: a Kagay-anon social scientist who spent 54 years showing that data is most powerful when it serves people.

Cabaraban’s career was a blueprint for social research with impact, shaping the study of society in the Philippines. A magna cum laude graduate of Xavier-Ateneo, she earned a PhD in Sociology focusing on population studies and deepened her expertise in social and economic statistics at George Washington University.

She also contributed as a fellow with the World Health Organization, blending rigorous quantitative methods with a relentless focus on human welfare.

Her research addressed some of the Philippines’ most pressing social challenges: maternal and child health, gender equality, migration, inter-ethnic relations, and climate resilience. But her influence extended beyond numbers. She championed the idea that social science is most meaningful when it empowers the vulnerable.

“Research and teaching are my major undertakings,” she once wrote, reflecting on the craft that became her life’s work.

She was born in Leon, Iloilo on July 22, 1938, and she died in Cagayan de Oro on November 25, 2024, the city where she and her husband Henry raised a family and where she spent the greater part of her years. 

She was 86 when cardiac arrest claimed her, after a long struggle with a heart condition that had required angioplasty. Death in her case was both an end and a punctuation to a life lived with purpose and rigor, the kind that leaves behind more than memories and sets a standard.

Her husband Henry hailed from Northern Mindanao, from Balingasag in Misamis Oriental, east of Cagayan de Oro. They met in Manila, where she was an academic scholar at Manuel L. Quezon University and he was renting a space at her uncle’s house. It was not a glamorous beginning, but it was the start of a partnership – a marriage – that would endure decades.

They settled in Cagayan de Oro, where she pursued her education at Xavier-Ateneo, earning her degree even as all five of their children had already been born.

Her daughter Sharina said that as a student of Sociology, the late Jesuit priest Francis Madigan, founder of the Research Institute for Mindanao Culture (RIMCU), had noticed her brilliance. He invited her to work as a data encoder at a time when computers were enormous and unwieldy machines. She was soon absorbed as a full-time staff member at RIMCU, beginning a career that would leave an indelible mark on social science in Cagayan de Oro and elsewhere in Mindanao.

The memorial fund in her honor aims to continue that legacy, supporting aspiring social scientists who share her vision of evidence-informed policy making with a human touch.

Dr. Chona Echavez, RIMCU director at Xavier-Ateneo and PPA president, said the fund will support research work of undergraduates and graduates along interests close to Cabaraban’s heart.

Echavez said the memorial fund, which will be managed by RIMCU and Xavier-Ateneo’s Department of Sociology and Anthropology, will also help young researchers participate in conferences and other capacity-building activities to make them more competent and better equipped.

Don Antonio Velez, assistant professor at the university’s sociology and anthropology department, said, “This fund is a tribute to a woman who believed that data is most powerful when it is used to serve the vulnerable. By launching it during the PPA International Scientific Conference, we ensure her commitment inspires researchers across the globe.”

The launch was the highlight of the 2026 International Scientific Conference, themed “Intersections: Population, Environment, and Climate Resilience in the Philippines,” which brought together local and international demographers, academics, and policymakers to discuss population trends, climate challenges, and the nation’s demographic dividend.

For the family of Cabaraban, who attended alongside colleagues and scholars, the memorial fund was more than a financial endowment. It celebrated a life spent asking not just, “What does the data say?” but, “How can this knowledge serve the community?”

Through this fund, her legacy will not only be remembered in textbooks and journals, but lived daily in the work of social scientists who continue to follow her example: merging numbers with nuance, statistics with social conscience, and research with real-world impact. – Rappler.com

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