Background: In the past few years rubber planting has spread rapidly throughout northern Laos, especially in Luang Namtha province that borders China. The impetus for this boom has come partly from the spiralling demand for rubber in China (now the world's largest rubber consumer), the high world prices for rubber, and China's promotion of overseas investment through its opium-replacement policy. These economic factors have converged with the desperate need of impoverished highlanders in northern Laos to replace opium as a cash crop as a consequence of a recent opium-eradication campaign and inadequate alternative development. Methods: This paper draws upon ethnographic and agro-economic research in northern Laos and neighbouring regions an...
After more than three decades of relatively uninterrupted economic growth across much of Asia, there...
In response to demand from China, rubber smallholdings are being established by shifting cultivators...
This paper deals with the relationship between opium revenue farming and the development of capitali...
Rubber smallholdings are being established by shifting cultivators in Northern Laos, in response to ...
Rubber’s Reach is a grounded, transnational study of China’s global economic integration through a f...
Rubber’s Reach is a grounded, transnational study of China’s global economic integration through a f...
Rubber trees have been planted in the Northern Province of Laos since the mid-1990s, with tapping be...
This research aims to analyze 1) the Lao government’s responses in coping with illicit drugs in Laos...
The government of Laos long term policy is aiming at reducing rural poverty and stabilize shifting c...
Since 1998 opium production in Southeast Asia has declined by some 67% from 1,437 tons in 1998 to 46...
In Northern Laos, as elsewhere in the Southeast Asian uplands, there is an agricultural transition u...
Laos is presently the third largest producer of illicit opium in the world. Committed to its obligat...
Existing problems in the developing countries include not only the lagging economic development but ...
This paper investigates the direct and cascading land system consequences of a Chinese company’s lan...
Thailand’s near-total elimination of opium poppy cultivation is attributed to “alternative developme...
After more than three decades of relatively uninterrupted economic growth across much of Asia, there...
In response to demand from China, rubber smallholdings are being established by shifting cultivators...
This paper deals with the relationship between opium revenue farming and the development of capitali...
Rubber smallholdings are being established by shifting cultivators in Northern Laos, in response to ...
Rubber’s Reach is a grounded, transnational study of China’s global economic integration through a f...
Rubber’s Reach is a grounded, transnational study of China’s global economic integration through a f...
Rubber trees have been planted in the Northern Province of Laos since the mid-1990s, with tapping be...
This research aims to analyze 1) the Lao government’s responses in coping with illicit drugs in Laos...
The government of Laos long term policy is aiming at reducing rural poverty and stabilize shifting c...
Since 1998 opium production in Southeast Asia has declined by some 67% from 1,437 tons in 1998 to 46...
In Northern Laos, as elsewhere in the Southeast Asian uplands, there is an agricultural transition u...
Laos is presently the third largest producer of illicit opium in the world. Committed to its obligat...
Existing problems in the developing countries include not only the lagging economic development but ...
This paper investigates the direct and cascading land system consequences of a Chinese company’s lan...
Thailand’s near-total elimination of opium poppy cultivation is attributed to “alternative developme...
After more than three decades of relatively uninterrupted economic growth across much of Asia, there...
In response to demand from China, rubber smallholdings are being established by shifting cultivators...
This paper deals with the relationship between opium revenue farming and the development of capitali...