Forced evictions are commonplace in the developing world, mainly due to the need to repurpose land for allegedly higher order enterprises. In this post, Camillo Boano and Giorgio Talocci discuss their research with two relocation sites that originated from the same eviction in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. By looking at these cases, they show how newly-formed settlements can follow diametrically different paths: whereas one conforms to the current model of social development, the other one contests this model through home-grown urbanity practices
This dissertation explicates the remaking of sovereign rule through land reform in Phnom Penh, Cambo...
This paper reveals how rural Cambodian people reconstructed their social relationships after the col...
Land grabbing is a serious issue in Cambodia, where land concessions covered approximately 65 percen...
This paper examines the design and evolution of a land-sharing process established for the on-site r...
With the specific ethnographic research conducted in two relocation sites (Borei Santepheap Pi and O...
Postwar property reforms in transitional Cambodia plunged the country into new conflict: a war of la...
UnrestrictedThis study examines the struggle of residents of four slums in the heart of the Cambodia...
This Article culminates a project undertaken by the Walter Leitner International Human Rights Clinic...
Land titling is a popular development intervention to secure the housing tenure of residents across ...
The global land grab has played out vividly in Cambodia, giving rise to rural upheaval and new polit...
Cambodia is a country undergoing a major urbanization. The capital - Phnom Penh is growing rapidly, ...
Land grabbing is a serious issue in Cambodia, where land concessions covered approximately 65 perce...
This article outlines a case study of building participation in squatter communities in Phnom Penh, ...
The Cambodian case examines migration, land tenure and land management, in a context of conflict and...
peer reviewedIn Cambodia, the interactions between large-scale land investment and land titling gath...
This dissertation explicates the remaking of sovereign rule through land reform in Phnom Penh, Cambo...
This paper reveals how rural Cambodian people reconstructed their social relationships after the col...
Land grabbing is a serious issue in Cambodia, where land concessions covered approximately 65 percen...
This paper examines the design and evolution of a land-sharing process established for the on-site r...
With the specific ethnographic research conducted in two relocation sites (Borei Santepheap Pi and O...
Postwar property reforms in transitional Cambodia plunged the country into new conflict: a war of la...
UnrestrictedThis study examines the struggle of residents of four slums in the heart of the Cambodia...
This Article culminates a project undertaken by the Walter Leitner International Human Rights Clinic...
Land titling is a popular development intervention to secure the housing tenure of residents across ...
The global land grab has played out vividly in Cambodia, giving rise to rural upheaval and new polit...
Cambodia is a country undergoing a major urbanization. The capital - Phnom Penh is growing rapidly, ...
Land grabbing is a serious issue in Cambodia, where land concessions covered approximately 65 perce...
This article outlines a case study of building participation in squatter communities in Phnom Penh, ...
The Cambodian case examines migration, land tenure and land management, in a context of conflict and...
peer reviewedIn Cambodia, the interactions between large-scale land investment and land titling gath...
This dissertation explicates the remaking of sovereign rule through land reform in Phnom Penh, Cambo...
This paper reveals how rural Cambodian people reconstructed their social relationships after the col...
Land grabbing is a serious issue in Cambodia, where land concessions covered approximately 65 percen...