This paper looks at scalar politics, power struggles, and institutional emergence in Daw Lar Lake in Karen state, Myanmar. It brings to light tensions between centralized and decentralized approaches in the country’s natural resource governance, and how these are manifested in the current legal stalemate with regard to the formal management status of the lake. Building on earlier research on legal pluralism and critical institutionalism, we look at: 1) how the current legal stalemate with regard to the formal management status of the lake is rooted in ongoing bureaucratic struggles between different government agencies; 2) local communities’ strategies to develop and implement their own vision of lake governance through the formation of the...
After a spout of optimism surrounding Myanmar's so-called democratic transition in the post-2010 per...
Amid Myanmar’s political transition and despite its new government’s discourse of inclusion and di...
In this paper, we question an often-unchallenged assumption that we all talk about the same ‘thing’ ...
Following the National League for Democracy’s landslide victory in the 2015 national election, Myanm...
The intersection between land grabs and climate change mitigation politics in Myanmar has created ne...
State control of land plays a critical role in producing land dispossession throughout the Global So...
Since 2011 and the transition to civilian government, Myanmar and the Ayeyarwady Delta in particular...
The changing notion of state territoriality highlights overlapping power structures at international...
Landscape Approaches have been proposed as a transferable model of multi-stakeholder governance, yet...
Landscape Approaches have been proposed as a transferable model of multi-stakeholder governance, yet...
Along the Salween River, water is governed at multiple—at times overlapping—scales with implications...
Over the past two decades, Myanmar’s upland areas have gradually turned into formally administered, ...
In Myanmar, since the transition to a quasi-civilian government in 2011, resolving land disputes has...
Theoretically questioning what land is and why it gets contentious, this thesis explores land politi...
In the same year 2015, when the Myanmar people elected a new civil government, Myanmar representativ...
After a spout of optimism surrounding Myanmar's so-called democratic transition in the post-2010 per...
Amid Myanmar’s political transition and despite its new government’s discourse of inclusion and di...
In this paper, we question an often-unchallenged assumption that we all talk about the same ‘thing’ ...
Following the National League for Democracy’s landslide victory in the 2015 national election, Myanm...
The intersection between land grabs and climate change mitigation politics in Myanmar has created ne...
State control of land plays a critical role in producing land dispossession throughout the Global So...
Since 2011 and the transition to civilian government, Myanmar and the Ayeyarwady Delta in particular...
The changing notion of state territoriality highlights overlapping power structures at international...
Landscape Approaches have been proposed as a transferable model of multi-stakeholder governance, yet...
Landscape Approaches have been proposed as a transferable model of multi-stakeholder governance, yet...
Along the Salween River, water is governed at multiple—at times overlapping—scales with implications...
Over the past two decades, Myanmar’s upland areas have gradually turned into formally administered, ...
In Myanmar, since the transition to a quasi-civilian government in 2011, resolving land disputes has...
Theoretically questioning what land is and why it gets contentious, this thesis explores land politi...
In the same year 2015, when the Myanmar people elected a new civil government, Myanmar representativ...
After a spout of optimism surrounding Myanmar's so-called democratic transition in the post-2010 per...
Amid Myanmar’s political transition and despite its new government’s discourse of inclusion and di...
In this paper, we question an often-unchallenged assumption that we all talk about the same ‘thing’ ...