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States and illegality in the upper-Mekong borderlands

October 22nd, 2006 by Andrew Walker · 1 Comment

The latest Newsletter from the International Institute for Asian Studies features a series of articles on “underworlds and borderlands”. I contributed one article based on research I conducted some years ago in the upper-Mekong borderlands. The brief article proposes moving beyond the common dichotomy between regulating states and resistant borderlanders:

Borderlands are often described as ‘frontier zones’ characterized by ‘rebelliousness, lawlessness and/or an absence of laws’. Anecdotes resonate with popular images of a remote underworld (or perhaps ‘outerworld’) where state authority is weak and lawlessness prevails. In the upper Mekong borderlands of Thailand, Laos and Burma, the imagery of borderland illegality persists both as spectre and lure, but the substance of what happens there reveals a state and society in league.

Tags: Burma · Laos · Publications · Thailand · The Mekong · Trans-Border Issues

1 response so far ↓

  • 1 Scott Moore // Oct 24, 2006 at 9:14 am

    Just came across this blog. Very much enjoyed your book “The Legend of the Golden Boat.” Took it with me to Thailand and Laos this summer and found it a fascinating read. Congrats.

    SM

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