Land And Loyalty: Security And The Development Of Property Rights In Thailand
$38.00 SGD
Domestic and international development strategies often focus on private ownership as a crucial anchor for long-term investment; the security of property rights provides a foundation for capitalist expansion. In recent years, Thailand's policies have been hailed as a prime example of how granting formal land rights to poor farmers in low-income countries can result in economic benefits. But the country provides a puzzle: Thailand faced major security threats from colonial powers in the nineteenth century and from communism in the twentieth century, yet only in the latter case did the government respond with pro-development tactics.
In Land and Loyalty, Tomas Larsson argues that institutional underdevelopment may prove, under certain circumstances, a strategic advantage rather than a weakness and that external threats play an important role in shaping the development of property regimes. Security concerns, he find, often guide economic policy. The domestic legacies, legal and socioeconomic, resulting from state responses to the outside world and limit the strategies available to politicians. While Larsson's extensive archival research findings are drawn from Thai sources, he situates the experiences of Thailand in comparative perspective by contrasting them with the trajectory of property rights in Japan, Burma, and the Philippines.
"Land and Loyalty makes a strong argument that will certainly cause many scholars of Southeast Asia to rethink colonial history, extraterritoriality, and land rights. Tomas Larsson demonstrates the significance of land-rights regimes both in terms of their current importance in development policies and as an entry point to better understand Thailand's relationship with colonizing states. This book will have lasting value." - Peter Vandergeest
"His highly original approach to the question is a model of concise, analytically-driven historical research, and Land and Loyalty makes impressive contributions to scholarship on development, property rights, state formation, and security." - Derek Hall
Tomas LARSSON is Lecturer in the Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Cambridge.
Publication Year: 2012
334 pages, 229mm x 153mm
ISBN: 978-9971-69-666-5, Paperback
NUS Press