Opium poppy cultivation in Thailand fell from 12,112 hectares in 1961 to 281 ha in 2015. One outlier exists: Chiang Mai province’s remote southwestern district, Omkoi. 90% of the district is a national forest reserve where human habitation is illegal. However, an ethnic Karen population has lived there since long before the law that outlawed them was created, unconnected to the state by road, with limited or no access to health, education and other services: they cultivate the majority of Thailand’s known opium poppy, because they have little other choice. They increasingly rely on cash-based markets, their lack of citizenship precludes them from land tenure which might incentivize them to grow alternate crops, and their statelessness precl...
In this far-reaching examination of environmental problems and politics in northern Thailand, Tim Fo...
Shifting cultivation practised communities do not have sufficient land for irrigated paddy growing. ...
This research aims to analyze 1) the Lao government’s responses in coping with illicit drugs in Laos...
Thailand’s near-total elimination of opium poppy cultivation is attributed to “alternative developme...
Policy definitions of illegal logging are anchored in national forest governance institutions. Howev...
This article uses a case study to describe the human ecological crisis among Thailand's former opiu...
ISSN 1919‐0581In the 1980s in Thailand, it was estimated that 10 million people were occupying land ...
Northeast Thailand experienced a rubber boom that began in the 2000s with a sudden swing away from t...
The accelerated rate of global forest depletion poses a series of complexproblems for development pl...
In the 1960s, Thailand was the biggest opium producing country in the world. This article presents T...
This paper explores the relationship between the illicit opium economy and processes of agrarian cha...
Since 1998 opium production in Southeast Asia has declined by some 67% from 1,437 tons in 1998 to 46...
Since 2005, the Thai government has, as a matter of policy, been seeking to increase production of b...
As part of the Thai Government’s objective to increase energy security through biodiesel, oil palm w...
The forests of Thailand have been depleted at an alarming rate over the past few decades in Pha Khao...
In this far-reaching examination of environmental problems and politics in northern Thailand, Tim Fo...
Shifting cultivation practised communities do not have sufficient land for irrigated paddy growing. ...
This research aims to analyze 1) the Lao government’s responses in coping with illicit drugs in Laos...
Thailand’s near-total elimination of opium poppy cultivation is attributed to “alternative developme...
Policy definitions of illegal logging are anchored in national forest governance institutions. Howev...
This article uses a case study to describe the human ecological crisis among Thailand's former opiu...
ISSN 1919‐0581In the 1980s in Thailand, it was estimated that 10 million people were occupying land ...
Northeast Thailand experienced a rubber boom that began in the 2000s with a sudden swing away from t...
The accelerated rate of global forest depletion poses a series of complexproblems for development pl...
In the 1960s, Thailand was the biggest opium producing country in the world. This article presents T...
This paper explores the relationship between the illicit opium economy and processes of agrarian cha...
Since 1998 opium production in Southeast Asia has declined by some 67% from 1,437 tons in 1998 to 46...
Since 2005, the Thai government has, as a matter of policy, been seeking to increase production of b...
As part of the Thai Government’s objective to increase energy security through biodiesel, oil palm w...
The forests of Thailand have been depleted at an alarming rate over the past few decades in Pha Khao...
In this far-reaching examination of environmental problems and politics in northern Thailand, Tim Fo...
Shifting cultivation practised communities do not have sufficient land for irrigated paddy growing. ...
This research aims to analyze 1) the Lao government’s responses in coping with illicit drugs in Laos...