The Thai Government has imposed a state of emergency in Bangkok and its immediate surrounding for 60 days to end the demonstrations and blockade of the city aimed at bringing down Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra. A veteran political observer in Bangkok analyses the historical and cultural factors underlying the protests ad discusses a possible solution to the imbroglio through the Thai Middle Way. This is the first part of an abridge version of the article first published by the Asia Times Online on 13 January 2014 as ‘History Shows Way out of Thai Conflict’
Thailand is a country known for its political instability. Thai students are arguably one of the mos...
Grey Area Phenomena, as mentioned in Sebastian Hiltner’s article, pose a serious challenge to the fo...
With the deadly conflict in Thailand’s predominantly Malay Muslim South at a stalemate, this report...
The article presents deeply polarized Thai society, a political crisis and confrontation between sup...
In the search for a Thai Middle Way solution to the current political crisis, two key conditions hav...
It was partly the unresolved conflict in Thailand\u27s deep south, accentuated since January 2004 th...
ABSTRACT: Rather than viewing the recent violence in the Thai South largely as a product of long-sta...
Thailand has since 2004 formed an exception to the general peace trend in East Asia. An insurgency i...
I intend to approach the current decade-long political crisis in Thailand from two perspectives: pow...
When thinking about conflict in Thailand, people will tend to portray it through the street protest ...
Since 2006, Thailand's politics has been polarised by intense divisions and violence to a point wher...
Thailand’s southern border region is distinctly different from the rest of the country due to its pr...
From 14 March 2010 onwards, a mass of suea daeng, literally ‘red shirts’, began a prolonged, mass pr...
The southernmost provinces of Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat, otherwise known as changwat chaidaen pak...
The current problem facing Thailand is the inability of the country to move beyond conflict due t...
Thailand is a country known for its political instability. Thai students are arguably one of the mos...
Grey Area Phenomena, as mentioned in Sebastian Hiltner’s article, pose a serious challenge to the fo...
With the deadly conflict in Thailand’s predominantly Malay Muslim South at a stalemate, this report...
The article presents deeply polarized Thai society, a political crisis and confrontation between sup...
In the search for a Thai Middle Way solution to the current political crisis, two key conditions hav...
It was partly the unresolved conflict in Thailand\u27s deep south, accentuated since January 2004 th...
ABSTRACT: Rather than viewing the recent violence in the Thai South largely as a product of long-sta...
Thailand has since 2004 formed an exception to the general peace trend in East Asia. An insurgency i...
I intend to approach the current decade-long political crisis in Thailand from two perspectives: pow...
When thinking about conflict in Thailand, people will tend to portray it through the street protest ...
Since 2006, Thailand's politics has been polarised by intense divisions and violence to a point wher...
Thailand’s southern border region is distinctly different from the rest of the country due to its pr...
From 14 March 2010 onwards, a mass of suea daeng, literally ‘red shirts’, began a prolonged, mass pr...
The southernmost provinces of Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat, otherwise known as changwat chaidaen pak...
The current problem facing Thailand is the inability of the country to move beyond conflict due t...
Thailand is a country known for its political instability. Thai students are arguably one of the mos...
Grey Area Phenomena, as mentioned in Sebastian Hiltner’s article, pose a serious challenge to the fo...
With the deadly conflict in Thailand’s predominantly Malay Muslim South at a stalemate, this report...