Agrarian transformations, market integration and globalization
processes are impacting upon rural Southeast Asia with increasingly
complex and diverse consequences. In response, local inhabitants
are devising a broad range of resistance measures that they feel
will best protect or improve their livelihoods, ensure greater
social justice and equity, or allow them to just be left alone.
This book develops a multi-scalar approach to examine such
resistance occurring in relation to agrarian transformations in the
Southeast Asian region.
The contributors take a fresh look at the diversity of sites of
struggle and the combinations of resistance measures being utilized
in contemporary Southeast Asia. They reveal that open public
conflicts and debates are taking place between dominators and the
oppressed, at the same time as covert critiques of power and
everyday forms of resistance. The book shows how resistance
measures are context contingent, shaped by different world views,
and shift according to local circumstances, the opening and closing
of political opportunity structures, and the historical
peculiarities of resistance dynamics.
By providing new conceptual approaches and illustrative case
studies that cut across scales and forms, this book will be of
interest to academics and students in comparative politics,
sociology, human geography, environmental studies, cultural
anthropology and Southeast Asian studies. It will also help to
further debate and action among academics, activists and
policymakers.
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