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This book is based on extensive research and regular visits to
East Timor since 1995. It considers the trials that the people of
East Timor have undergone in their long struggle for independence,
and issues that have arisen out of independence. This account
places East Timor within the context of other post-colonial states,
noting the problems that most of them have faced in coming to grips
with their new-found freedoms, and how they have managed, or
mismanaged, such freedoms. It also traces the themes and issues
within the independence movement, noting how these have contributed
to post-independence outcomes, in particular the political tensions
that almost saw East Timor collapse as a viable state in 2006. The
books concludes with an assessment of the 2007 elections which,
despite some post-election violence, saw the consolidation of
democratic processes in East Timor, and which marked it as having a
brighter future in this one critical respect.
This book offers a critical reassessment of the "Asian values"
debate, which dominated the human rights discourse in the late
1990s, and a reappraisal of the human rights situation in Asia
since then. In this book Asian and non-Asian scholars contextualize
the "Asian values" debate and examine in what ways the issues
raised then continue to trouble Asian societies. Human rights are
seen both in the context of political developments in individual
Asian countries as well as in relation to global issues such as the
Global War on Terror. The book challenges the reader to critically
examine human rights rhetoric and practice both in Asia and
globally.
While a number of societies have begun to lift themselves out of
poverty, many more remain in what appears to be a permanent cycle
of failure, inappropriate development and exploitation. Assessing
this repetition of development failures, this book critically
analyses some of the key features of conventional development
paradigms, explaining why they have been less successful in
addressing outstanding development problems and offering
alternative ways forward. With contributions from development
practitioners as well as academics, the result is a novel blend of
theory and practice in critiquing the development field.
Designed as a critique of the key failures of international
development, this book brings together practitioners,
policy-makers, researchers, activists, and academics in an attempt
to work toward a shared conceptualisation of development by
outlining and critically reflecting on their own understanding of
development.
This book offers a critical reassessment of the 'Asian values'
debate, which dominated the human rights discourse in the late
1990s, and a reappraisal of the human rights situation in Asia
since then. The chapters in this book contextualize the debate and
examine in what ways the issues raised then continue to trouble
Asian societies.
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