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The art of not being governed: An anarchist history of upland Southeast Asia

This book, essentially an “anarchist history,” is the first-ever examination of the huge literature on state-making whose author evaluates why people would deliberately and reactively remain stateless. Among the strategies employed by the people of Zomia to remain stateless are physical dispersion in rugged terrain; agricultural practices that enhance mobility; pliable ethnic identities; devotion to prophetic, millenarian leaders; and maintenance of a largely oral culture that allows them to reinvent their histories and genealogies as they move between and around states.

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Field Value
စာတမ်းအမျိုးအစား Books and book chapters
စာရွက်စာတမ်း၏ ဘာသာစကား
  • အင်္ဂလိပ်ဘာသာစကား
ခေါင်းစဉ်များ
  • Agriculture and fishing
  • Civil and political rights
  • Environment and natural resources
  • Government
  • Land
  • Land tenure and land titling
ပထဝီဧရိယာ (spatial range)
  • လာအိုပြည်သူ့ဒီမိုကရက်တစ်သမ္မတနိုင်ငံ
မူပိုင်ခွင့် Yes
ရယူခြင်းနှင့် အသုံးပြုခြင်း အကန့်အသတ်များ

This is a photocopy of the first two chapters of the book. The full published work is 464 pages.

ပြင်ဆင်ချက် Unknown
ခွင့်ပြုချက် CC-BY-4.0
ဆက်သွယ်ရန်

Yale University Press, New Haven. +1 203 432 0960. Rights and Permissions: donna.anstey@yale.edu

ရေးသားသူ (တစ်ဦးချင်း) James C Scott
ISBN နံပါတ် 9780300169171
ထုတ်ဝေသည့်ရက်စွဲ 2009
စာမျက်နှာခွဲ Excerpt: Chapters 1 and 2
အထွေထွေ မှတ်ချက်

Source: Yale Law Library website. https://www.law.yale.edu/system/files/documents/pdf/Intellectual_Life/LTW-Scott.pdf

တင်ခဲ့သည့်ရက်စွဲ ဇွန် 16, 2016, 11:34 (UTC)
ပြန်လည်ပြင်ဆင်သည့်ရက်စွဲ ဒီဇင်ဘာ 9, 2018, 07:45 (UTC)