Rural Transformations and Democracy in Northeast Thailand |
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Authors: | Somchai Phatharathananunth |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Mahasarakham University, Thailandschph@hotmail.com |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTThis article analyses the underlying economic, social and political processes that contributed to democratic progress in the rural areas of northeast Thailand. After the 2006 military coup villagers in the region played an important role in anti-coup activities and actively demanded for democratic rule. To defend democratic rule, villagers not only opposed military intervention but also challenged elites, who they considered had masterminded the coup. The coup was a landmark change in terms of the relationship between the highest authority in Thailand and the rural masses. According to the Thai hierarchical order, villagers are regarded as inferior who must obey the elite. Any action that does not conform to this rule is considered morally wrong and to be punished. Why did rural dwellers dare to engage openly in political action that defied the hierarchical order? To comprehend such actions the article examines structural changes in Thailand’s countryside that released villagers from traditional bonds and enabled them to engage in a new form of political mobilisation. It is argued that the emergence of a democratic movement in the rural northeast is a result of two important processes: rural socio-economic transformations and political democratisation. |
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Keywords: | Rural transformations post-peasant society middle-income peasants democracy northeast Thailand |
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