
State Institutions, Civic Associations, and Identity Demands: Regional Movements in Greater Southeast Asia
Author(s): Amy H. Liu (Editor), Joel Selway
- Publisher: University of Michigan Press
- Publication Date: March 12, 2024
- Language: English
- Print length: 316 pages
- ISBN-10: 0472056077
- ISBN-13: 9780472056071
Book Description
State Institutions, Civic Associations, and Identity Demands examines over a dozen regions, comparing and contrasting successful cases to abandoned, unsuccessful, or dormant cases. The cases range from successful secession (East Timor, Singapore) and ongoing secessionist movements (Southern Philippines), to internally divided regional movements (Kachin State), low-level regionalist stirrings (Lanna, Taiwan), and local but not regional mobilization of identity (Bali, Minahasan), all the way to failed movements (Bataks, South Maluku) and regions that remain politically inert (East and North Malaysia, Northeast Thailand). While each chapter is written by a country expert, the contributions rely on a range of methods, from comparative historical analysis, to ethnography, field interviews, and data from public opinion surveys. Together, they contribute important new knowledge on little-known cases that nevertheless illuminate the history of regions and ethnic groups in Southeast Asia. Although focused on Southeast Asia, the book identifies the factors that can explain why movements emerge and successfully develop and concludes with a chapter by Henry Hale that illustrates how this can be applied globally.
Editorial Reviews
Review
“
State Institutions, Civic Associations, and Identity Demands is a fine contribution: through looking at detailed ethnographic case studies of different ethnic minority groups in Southeast Asia, this volume explores why some groups opt for secessionism and some do not.” — Roger D. Long, Eastern Michigan University“Terrific, interesting case studies on ethnic groups that are seldom discussed or studied. The breadth of cases is useful for looking at the relationship between political institutions and organizational aspects within different communities.” — Amy L. Freedman, Pace University
“Overall, the analysis of regionally based identities―their politicization or interaction with other cross-cutting cleavages, their relationship to state inclusion or exclusion, and the civic associations around which they organize―adds great value to our understanding of the mobilization of ethnic identity, territorially based secessionist movements, and the conditions that explain why some potential movements are never realized.”
― Jacques Bertrand, Southeast Asian Studies
About the Author
Joel Sawat Selway is Associate Professor of Political Science at Brigham Young University.
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