Petra Desatova « Rebranding Thailand: why is junta so obsessed with wordplay? » by Kornkritch Somjittranukit, 04/02/2018, Prachatai (English) During the past four years, the junta’s National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) has added many terms to the dictionary of Thai politics. At the beginning of their regime, the NCPO coined the term “Returning Happiness”, which later became the name of a weekly TV programme that junta leader Gen Prayut Chan-o-cha uses as a channel to communicate with t..
2019-2021 was a peculiar triennium for Thailand. In 2019, the military leaders who had seized power ...
Thailand became a military dictatorship in May 2014, after the army deposed the democratically elect...
In this study, Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis (MCDA) is employed to analyze television remar...
In the aftermath of the May 2014 coup, Thailand’s self-appointed Prime Minister General Prayut Chan-...
On May 20, 2014, the Royal Army imposed martial law on Thailand, with the declared purpose of restor...
This paper examines nation branding in the context of post-coup Thailand. It challenges the dominant...
I intend to approach the current decade-long political crisis in Thailand from two perspectives: pow...
The main goal of the study is to critically investigate the major elements of the political speeches...
Thailand represents now a country where an emerging government-initiated ideology of “commercial nat...
The 18th military coup in Thai history ended the era of Thaksin Shinawatra. The reasons for the cou...
This article argues that constitutionalism is a 'disease' that afflicts Thailand's body politic, ref...
One of the military establishments that have gained considerable power and autonomy, and it is out o...
In January 2017 King Maha Vajiralongkorn, who had ascended the throne of Chakri only one month earli...
A year after becoming a military dictatorship once more, Thailand’s new constitution – the 20th sinc...
Events in Thailand during 2016 were overshadowed by the death of long-reigning King Bhumibol Adulyad...
2019-2021 was a peculiar triennium for Thailand. In 2019, the military leaders who had seized power ...
Thailand became a military dictatorship in May 2014, after the army deposed the democratically elect...
In this study, Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis (MCDA) is employed to analyze television remar...
In the aftermath of the May 2014 coup, Thailand’s self-appointed Prime Minister General Prayut Chan-...
On May 20, 2014, the Royal Army imposed martial law on Thailand, with the declared purpose of restor...
This paper examines nation branding in the context of post-coup Thailand. It challenges the dominant...
I intend to approach the current decade-long political crisis in Thailand from two perspectives: pow...
The main goal of the study is to critically investigate the major elements of the political speeches...
Thailand represents now a country where an emerging government-initiated ideology of “commercial nat...
The 18th military coup in Thai history ended the era of Thaksin Shinawatra. The reasons for the cou...
This article argues that constitutionalism is a 'disease' that afflicts Thailand's body politic, ref...
One of the military establishments that have gained considerable power and autonomy, and it is out o...
In January 2017 King Maha Vajiralongkorn, who had ascended the throne of Chakri only one month earli...
A year after becoming a military dictatorship once more, Thailand’s new constitution – the 20th sinc...
Events in Thailand during 2016 were overshadowed by the death of long-reigning King Bhumibol Adulyad...
2019-2021 was a peculiar triennium for Thailand. In 2019, the military leaders who had seized power ...
Thailand became a military dictatorship in May 2014, after the army deposed the democratically elect...
In this study, Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis (MCDA) is employed to analyze television remar...