Hong Kong University
Individual Documents
Description:
CONTENTS: I.
The
village
in
Old Burma...
II.
The
Village under British Administration to 1886...
III.
British Policy and the Vi11ae after 1886...
IV.
The
Effects of
the Removal of Myothugyis...
V.
The
Effects of
Economic Forces...
VI.
The
Effects of
the Loosening
of the Religious Bond...
VII.
The
Rebellion
of 1930...
VIII.
The Village in the Growth of nationalism...
IX.
Conclusion,
List of Abbreviations,
Bibliography
Tint Sein, Ma
Source/publisher:
The University of Hong Kong
Date of publication:
1960-00-00
Date of entry/update:
2015-01-05
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
Hong Kong University
Language:
English
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Description:
3,650 results (05 January, 2015)
Source/publisher:
The University of Hong Kong vai Google
Date of entry/update:
2015-01-05
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
Hong Kong University
Language:
English
more
Description:
7,030 results (05 January, 2015)
Source/publisher:
The University of Hong Kong
Date of entry/update:
2015-01-05
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
Hong Kong University
Language:
English
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Description:
Contents:-
Ian
Holliday:
Preface...
Li
Chenyang:
The
Adjustment
of
Obama
Administration?s
Policies
towards
Myanmar:
Promoting
Democracy
in
Myanmar
or
Containing
China?...
Ashley
South:
Governance
and
Legitimacy
in
the
Peace
Process...
Kim
Jolliffe:
The
Role
of
People?s
Security
in
Peace
Building...
David
Allan:
Business
and
Peace
in
Myanmar:
Thoughts
on
Sector
Risks,
Related
to
Peace
and
Social
License
to
Operate
Issues...
Ian
Holliday:
Thinking
about
Myanmar?s
Citizenship
Crisis...
Matthew
J.
Walton:
Burmese
Politics
and
the
Pathology
of
Unity...
Khin
Khin
Lwin:
The
Displaced
in
Reform...
John
Bray:
Risk
Assessment,
International
Investment
and
Responsible
Business
Practice
in
Myanmar:
What
Has
Changed?...
Zhu
Li:
Politicization
of
China?s
Economic
Investment
in
Myanmar:
Cause
and
Impact...
Zhu
Xianghui:
Myanmar?s
Oil
and
Gas
Sector
since
2011:
Progress
and
Challenges...
Adam
Simpson:
From
?Outside?
to
?Inside?:
The
Transformation
of
Activism
over
Energy
Projects
in
Myanmar...
Wang
Zichang:
Amending
Constitution:
Focal
Point
of
Myanmar?s
Political
Development
in
2013...
Bi
Shihong:
Cooperation
and
Competition
between
U.S.
and
Japan?s
Policy
towards
Myanmar...
Yang
Baoyun:
The
European
Union
and
Future
Development
of
Myanmar...
Pavin
Chachavalpongpun:
Human
Security
in
Myanmar:
Critical
Hurdles...
Lei
Zhuning:
Development
of
Transport
Connectivity
in
Myanmar
and
the
Prospect
for
Regional
Cooperation...
Liu
Xuecheng:
Myanmar?s
Political
Transformation
and
New
Development
of
China
‐
Myanmar
Relations...
Aung
Aung:
China
‐
Myanmar
Relations
(2011
‐
2013):
Promoting
China?s
Image
in
Myanmar...
Lu
Guangsheng:
China?s
Investment
in
Myanmar
under
Its
Political
and
Economic
Reform...
Nora
Schlenzig:
State
Transformation
and
the
Geography
of
State
Power:
Exploring
Cross
‐
border
Development
between
China
and
Myanmar...
Diane
Tang:
Lee
China?s
Investments
and
Development
Assistance
in
Myanmar...
Khin
Maung
Nyo:
Challenges
Facing
Myanmar?s
Migrant
Workers...
Kerstin
Duell:
Exile
or
Return?
The
Diaspora?s
Role
in
Myanmar?s
Political
Transition...
Mung
Don:
Transitional
Justice
in
Myanmar:
Assessing
the
Alternatives...
Jacqueline
Menager:
Cultural
Elite:
Situating
Hip
Hop
in
the
Transition...
Renaud
Egreteau:
Soldiers
as
Lawmakers:
In
Search
for
a
Legislative
Role
for
the
Tatmadaw...
Wooyeal
Paik:
Authoritarian
Survival
Strategies
in
Comparative
Perspective:
Myanmar,
China
and
North
Korea...
Joakim
Kreutz:
Myanmar?s
Economic
Potential:
Peace
Making
or
Peace
Breaking?...
Andrew
Selth:
Obstacles
to
Police
Reform
in
Myanmar/Burma...
Song
Qingrun:
The
Prospects
of
Myanmar?s
Economic
Reform
and
Development
Various authors
Source/publisher:
The University of Hong Kong, Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, Yunnan University
Date of publication:
2013-06-19
Date of entry/update:
2015-01-04
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
Hong Kong University
Language:
English and Burmese
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Description:
Abstract: "This thesis examines the theories on military intervention in politics and
disengagement from what can be seen as extreme participation in the political
process, in the context of Thailand and Burma. It argues that although there are a
plethora of theories and theorists dealing with the
subject
there is an explainable
process by which it is possible to begin to understand military participation in
politics. Also, that there are discernable incentives and obstacles to military action,
effecting the decision to expand the military role to direct intervention and why
they might choose to limit their participation. It also suggests that there are many
factors, economic, historical, sociological and political, which contribute to what
can be seen in some countries as endemic military intervention in the changing of
government..."
Woodier, Jonathan Ralph
Source/publisher:
The University of Hong Kong
Date of publication:
1995-06-00
Date of entry/update:
2015-01-04
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Category:
Hong Kong University
Language:
English
more
Description:
ABSTRACT: "Fleeing state-sponsored violence and economic decline in their home country, hundreds
of thousands of Myanmar émigrés have in recent years crossed the border into
Thailand
in search of a better life.
For the estimated 2 million Myanmar migrants now living there,
however, life in Thailand presents its own challenges. With insufficient legal provisions
to handle the influx of migrants, the Thai government has largely turned a blind eye to
abuse and exploitation suffered by migrant workers. Yet despite poor working conditions
and exploitation, there does not appear to be much of a call to improve conditions
through mobilization among the Myanmar migrant community.
The marked absence of mobilization on any level thus begs the question: why is the
migrant population in Thailand so passive in the face of severe strain and exploitation?
This thesis explores the issue of non-
mobilization among
migrant groups, using as a
framework two core concepts: social mobilization and precarity. The long-standing
discourse on social mobilization focuses on social and political action in response to
societal strain, taking into account other factors such as
access to resources and
institutional opportunities. Precarity, a newer concept and compliment to the established
social mobilization debates,
has been used to describe a
lifestyle characterized by
critical
social, economic, and political insecurity..."
Eberle, Meghan Lea
Source/publisher:
The University of Hong Kong
Date of publication:
2010-02-15
Date of entry/update:
2015-01-04
Grouping:
Individual Documents
Language:
English
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