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Institute of Southeast Asian Studies Publishing
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of tables & FIGURES vii
- FOREWORD ix
- Contributors xiii
- ABBREVIATIONS xvii
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Section I. The 2006 Military Coup: Impact on the Thai Political Landscape
- 1. “Good Coup” Gone Bad: Thailand’s Political Developments since Thaksin’s Downfall 3
- 2. Unfinished Business: The Contagion of Conflict over a Century of Thai Political Development 17
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Section II. Defending the Old Political Consensus: The Military and the Monarchy
- 3. Broken Power: The Thai Military in the Aftermath of the 2006 Coup 49
- 4. The Monarchy and Anti-Monarchy: Two Elephants in the Room of Thai Politics and the State of Denial 79
- 5. Freedom and Silencing under the Neo-Absolutist Monarchy Regime in Thailand, 2006–2011 109
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Section III. New Political Discourses and the Emergence of Yellows and Reds
- 6. “Vote No!”: The PAD’s Decline from Powerful Movement to Political Sect? 141
- 7. The Red Shirts: From Anti-Coup Protesters to Social Mass Movement 170
- 8. Is Peasant Politics in Thailand Civil? 199
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Section IV. Crises of Legitimacy
- 9. Reaping the Whirlwind: Thailand’s Coup and the Southern Problem 219
- 10. From Marketplace Back to Battlefield: Thai-Cambodian Relations in the Age of a Militarized Politics 253
- Index 283
- Pictures 291
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of tables & FIGURES vii
- FOREWORD ix
- Contributors xiii
- ABBREVIATIONS xvii
-
Section I. The 2006 Military Coup: Impact on the Thai Political Landscape
- 1. “Good Coup” Gone Bad: Thailand’s Political Developments since Thaksin’s Downfall 3
- 2. Unfinished Business: The Contagion of Conflict over a Century of Thai Political Development 17
-
Section II. Defending the Old Political Consensus: The Military and the Monarchy
- 3. Broken Power: The Thai Military in the Aftermath of the 2006 Coup 49
- 4. The Monarchy and Anti-Monarchy: Two Elephants in the Room of Thai Politics and the State of Denial 79
- 5. Freedom and Silencing under the Neo-Absolutist Monarchy Regime in Thailand, 2006–2011 109
-
Section III. New Political Discourses and the Emergence of Yellows and Reds
- 6. “Vote No!”: The PAD’s Decline from Powerful Movement to Political Sect? 141
- 7. The Red Shirts: From Anti-Coup Protesters to Social Mass Movement 170
- 8. Is Peasant Politics in Thailand Civil? 199
-
Section IV. Crises of Legitimacy
- 9. Reaping the Whirlwind: Thailand’s Coup and the Southern Problem 219
- 10. From Marketplace Back to Battlefield: Thai-Cambodian Relations in the Age of a Militarized Politics 253
- Index 283
- Pictures 291