
Southeast Asian Development
By: Jonathan Rigg (Editor)
Multi-Item Pack | 10 October 2007 | Edition Number 1
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The eleven countries that make up the Southeast Asian region provide a rich and diverse context in which to view the development process and experience. The region spans different cultural contexts, colonial experiences, and economic experiments, and is home to some of the worlda (TM)s most successful developing economiesa "the so-styled Asian a miraclea (TM) economiesa "and also some which fall into the UN designation of a least developeda (TM).
This new three-volume collection, from Routledgea (TM)s Critical Concepts in the Social Sciences series, is guided by a broad definition of a developmenta (TM) and does not limit itself to development economics or even to development studies. Papers on development issues by anthropologists, historians, sociologists, geographers, political scientists, as well as by economists are represented in the volumes. The works are ordered not by disciplinary orientation (economics, anthropology, history, etc.) or by chronology (colonial, postcolonial, and so on) but, predominantly, by context and theme, to enable the intellectual progression of debates regarding, for example, the nature of rural society and rural development, to be more easily identified. The structure and range of works included within Southeast Asian Development ensure that it will be an invaluable reference resource for students and scholars alike.
VOLUME I
Introduction: âSoutheast Asian Development: An Introductory Essayâ (Jonathan Rigg)Part 1: History, Geography, and Colonialism: Development Before the Development Project
Histories and Geographies of Development1. John R. W. Smail (1961) âThe Possibility of an Autonomous History of Southeast Asiaâ, Journal of Southeast Asian History, 2(2), pp. 72â"102.
2. Anthony Reid (1993) âContinuities and Changesâ, Southeast Asia in the Age of Commerce 1450â"1680: Expansion and Crisis (New Haven: Yale University Press), pp. 326â"30.
3. Benedict Anderson (1991) âCensus, Map, Museumâ, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism (London: Verso), pp. 163â"85.
4. Harold C. Conklin (1954) âAn Ethnoecological Approach to Shifting Agricultureâ, New York Academy of Sciences, Transactions, 17: 133â"42.
5. Thongchai Winichakul (1994) âThe Coming of a New Geographyâ, Siam Mapped: A History of the Geo-body of a Nation (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press), pp. 37â"61.Colonialism and Development
6. J. S. Furnivall (1939) âPlural Economyâ, Netherlands India: A Study of Plural Economy (Cambridge University Press), pp. 446â"69.
7. R. H. Taylor (1995) âDisaster or Release? J. S. Furnivall and the Bankruptcy of Burmaâ, Modern Asian Studies, 29(1): 45â"63.
8. Manning Nash (1964) âSoutheast Asian Society: Dual or Multiple?â, Journal of Asian Studies, 23: 417â"23.
9. B. H. Higgins (1964) âSoutheast Asian Society: Dual or Multiple: Commentâ, Journal of Asian Studies, 23: 417â"23.10. A. H. Fenichel and W. G. Huff (1975) âColonialism and the Economic System of an Independent Burmaâ, Modern Asian Studies, 9(3), 321â"35.Part 2: Rural Society, Community, and Culture
Pre-Capitalist Rural Societies11. Eric R. Wolf (1957) âClosed Corporate Peasant Communities in Mesoamerica and Central Javaâ, Southwest Journal of Anthropology, 13(1), 1â"18.
12. Katherine A. Bowie (1992) âUnraveling the Myth of the Subsistence Economy: Textile Production in Nineteenth-Century Northern Thailandâ, Journal of Asian Studies, 51(4): 797â"823.Rural Society, Colonialism, and Capitalism
13. Clifford Geertz (1984) âCulture and Social Change: The Indonesian Caseâ, Man, 19: 511â"32.
14. John A. Larkin (1971) âThe Causes of an Involuted Society: A Theoretical Approach to Rural Southeast Asiaâ, Journal of Asian Studies, 30: 783â"95.
15. James C. Scott and Ben Kerkvliet (1973) âThe Politics of Survival: Peasant Response to "Progress" in Southeast Asiaâ, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 4: 241â"68.
16. Samuel Popkin (1976) âCorporatism and Colonialism: Political Economy of Rural Change in Vietnamâ, Comparative Politics, 8: 431â"64.
17. Amri Baharuddin Shamsul (1979) âThe Development of Underdevelopment of the Malaysian Peasantryâ, Journal of Contemporary Asia, 9: 434â"54.Rural Spaces and Rural People Under Conditions of Modernity
18. James C. Scott (1985) âHistory According to Winners and Losersâ, Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance (New Haven: Yale University Press), pp. 138â"64, 178â"83.
19. Gillian Hart (1992) âHousehold Production Reconsidered: Gender, Labor Conflict, and Technological Change in Malaysiaâs Muda Regionâ, World Development, 20(6): 809â"23.
20. Jonathan Rigg and Sakunee Nattapoolwat (2001) âEmbracing the Global in Thailand: Activism and Pragmatism in an Era of De-Agrarianisationâ, World Development, 29(6): 945â"60.
21. Bruce Koppel (1991), âThe Rural-Urban Dichotomy Reexamined: Beyond the Ersatz Debate?â, in Ginsburg, Koppel, and McGee (eds.), The Extended Metropolis: Settlement Transition in Asia (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press), pp. 47â"70.VOLUME II
Part 3: Urbanization, Industrialization, and Modern Lives and Livelihoods
Urbanization and Urban Growth22. Terry McGee (1976) âBeach Heads and Enclaves: The Urban Debate and the Urbanization Process in Southeast Asia since 1945, in Y. M. Yeung and C. P. Low (eds.), Changing Southeast Asian Cities: Readings on Urbanization (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 60â"75.
23. T. G. McGee (1991) âThe Emergence of Desakota Regions in Asia: Expanding A Hypothesisâ, in Norton Ginsburg, Bruce Koppel, and T. G. McGee (eds.), The Extended Metropolis: Settlement Transition in Asia (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press), pp. 3â"25.
24. Philip. F. Kelly (2003) âUrbanization and the Politics of Land in the Manila Regionâ, Annals of the American Academy of Social and Political Sciences, 590(1), pp. 170â"87.Urban, Peri-Urban, and Industrial Lives and Livelihoods
25. Dean K. Forbes (1981) âProduction, Reproduction and Underdevelopment: Petty Commodity Producers in Ujung Pandang, Indonesiaâ, Environment and Planning, A13: 841â"56.
26. Daniel T. Sicular (1991) âPockets of Peasants in Indonesian Cities: The Case of Scavengersâ, World Development, 19(2/3): 137â"61.
27. Hal Hill (1991) âThe Emperorâs Clothes Can Now be Made in Indonesiaâ, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 27(3): 89â"127.
28. Sylvia Chant and Cathy McIlwaine (1995) âGender and Export Manufacturing in the Philippines: Continuity or Change in Female Employment? The Case of the Mactan Export Processing Zoneâ, Gender, Place and Culture, 2(2): 147â"76.
29. Peter Hancock (1997) âThe Walking Ghosts of West Javaâ, Inside Indonesia, Julyâ"Sept.: 16â"19.
30. Peter Hancock (2001) âRural Women Earning Income in Indonesian Factories: The Impact on Gender Relationsâ, Gender and Development, 9(1): 18â"24.
31. Mary Beth Mills (1997), âContesting the Margins of Modernity: Women, Migration and Consumption in Thailandâ, American Ethnologist, 24(1), pp. 37â"61.
32. Aihwa Ong (1997) âThe Gender and Labor Politics of Postmodernityâ, in David Lloyd and Lisa Lowe (eds.), The Politics of Culture in the Shadow of Capital (Durham: Duke University Press), pp. 61â"97.VOLUME III
Part 4: Making Miracles, Creating Crises: The Political Economy of Growth and Crisis
Development and Developmental States33. H. Myint (1967) âThe Inward and Outward Looking Countries of Southeast Asiaâ, Malayan Economic Review, 31(1): 1â"13.
34. Ippei Yamazawa (1992) âOn Pacific Economic Integrationâ, Economic Journal, 102 (Nov.): 1519â"29.
35. A. Leftwich (1995) âBringing Politics Back In: Towards a Model of the Developmental Stateâ, Journal of Development Studies, 31: 400â"27.
36. Linda Low (2001) âThe Singapore Developmental State in the New Economy and Polityâ, Pacific Review, 14(3): 411â"42.
37. W. G. Huff (1995) âThe Developmental State, Government, and Singapore Economic-Development Since 1960â, World Development, 23(8): 1421â"38.
38. Jomo K.S. (1984) âMalaysiaâs New Economic Policy: A Class Perspectiveâ, Pacific Viewpoint, 25(2): 153â"72.Asian Miracle and Asian Crisis
39. John M. Page (1994) âThe East Asian Miracle: An Introductionâ, World Development, 22(4): 615â"25.
40. Alice H. Amsden (1994) âWhy isnât the Whole World Experimenting with the East Asian Model to Develop? Review of The East Asian Miracleâ, World Development, 22(4): 627â"33.
41. Dwight H. Perkins (1994) âThere Are at Least Three Models of East Asian Developmentâ, World Development, 22(4): 655â"61.
42. Paul Krugman (1994) âThe Myth of Asiaâs Miracleâ, Foreign Affairs, 73(6): 62â"78.
43. Robert Wade (1998) âFrom "Miracle" to "Cronyism": Explaining the Great Asian Slumpâ, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 22(6): 693â"706.
44. Joseph E. Stiglitz (2001), âFrom Miracle to Crisis to Recovery: Lessons from Four Decades of East Asian Experienceâ, in Joseph Stiglitz and Shahid Yusuf (eds.), Rethinking the East Asian Miracle (New York: World Bank and Oxford University Press), pp. 509â"26.
45. Mark Thompson (2004), âPacific Asia after "Asian Values": Authoritarianism , Democracy, and "Good Governance"â, Third World Quarterly, 25(6): 1079â"95.
Part 5: Poverty, Affluence, and Cultures of Development
Poverty, Affluence, and Inequality46. Rex Mortimer (1973), âIndonesia: Growth or Development?â, in Rex Mortimer (ed.), Showcase State: The Illusion of Indonesiaâs Accelerated Modernisation (Sydney: Angus and Robertson), pp. 51â"66.
47. W. F. Wertheim (1980) âBetting on the "Elites" or Betting on the Poor? The Indonesian Caseâ, Occasional Paper, James Cook University of North Queensland, South East Asian Studies Committee No. 9, pp. 1â"11.
48. I. Shari (2000) âGlobalization and Economic Disparities in East and Southeast Asia: New Dilemmasâ, Third World Quarterly, 21(6): 963â"75.
49. Anne Booth (2000) âPoverty and Inequality in the Soeharto Era: An Assessmentâ, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 36(1): 73â"104.
50. Wade C. Edmundson (1994) âDo the Rich Get Richer, Do the Poor Get Poorer? East Java, Two Decades, Three Villages, 46 Peopleâ, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 30(2): 133â"48.
51. James F. Eder (1993), âFamily Farming and Household Enterprise in a Philippine Community, 1971â"1988: Persistence or Proletarianisation?â, Journal of Asian Studies 52(3): 647â"71.
52. Huw Jones and Tieng Pardthaisong (1999) âThe Impact of Overseas Labour Migration on Rural Thailand: Regional, Community and Individual Dimensionsâ, Journal of Rural Studies, 15(1): 35â"47.
53. Nancy Lee Peluso (1995) âWhose Woods Are These? Counter-Mapping Forest Territories in Kalimantan, Indonesiaâ, Antipode, 27(4): 383â"406.
54. Peter Vandergeest (2003), âLand to Some Tillers: Development-Induced Displacement in Laosâ, International Social Science Journal, 175: 47â"56.Culture and Development
55. Tania Murray Li (1999) âCompromising Power: Development, Culture, and Rule in Indonesiaâ, Cultural Anthropology, 14(3): 295â"322.
56. Fareed Zakaria (1994) âCulture is Destiny: A Conversation with Lee Kuan Yewâ, Foreign Affairs, 73(2): 109â"26.
57. Kishore Mahbubani (1995) âThe Pacific Wayâ, Foreign Affairs, 74(1): 100â"11.
58. Michael Hill (2000) âAsian Values as Reverse Orientalism: Singaporeâ, Asia Pacific Viewpoint, 41(2): 177â"90.
59. Francis Fukuyama (1999) âAsian Values and the Current Crisisâ, Development Outreach (Summer) (www.worldbank.org).
ISBN: 9780415394369
ISBN-10: 0415394368
Series: Critical Concepts in the Social Sciences
Published: 10th October 2007
Format: Multi-Item Pack
Language: English
Number of Pages: 1376
Audience: College, Tertiary and University
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Country of Publication: GB
Edition Number: 1
Dimensions (cm): 23.4 x 15.6 x 8.26
Weight (kg): 2.71
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