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OverviewStretched out along the Western rim of the Pacific, historically torn between Chinese and US influence, the Philippines has been troubled by internal conflicts since its independence in 1946. In 1972, following two decades of communist insurgency and social unrest, President Ferdinand Marcos imposed martial law and established a 14-year dictatorship. Although Marcos was overthrown in 1986, the democracy that followed, as in many South-East Asian states, has been beleaguered by insurgency, mutiny, corruption and violence. Post-Colonial Statecraft in South East Asia, an historically aware ethnography of the region, aims to account for centralizing measures by the state and the resistance that it encounters when policing the frontiers. In the first study of its kind, and the result of several years of field research, Pak Nung Wong maps out the complex interweaving power structures of the tribal rulers in the northern regions of the Philippines. Featuring interviews with a range of local actors, including state officials, members of the judiciary, the police force, the Catholic Church, the military, the Chinese business community and the inarticulate ruled majority, Post-Colonial Statecraft in South East Asia provides a complete picture of Philippine political culture. By focusing on the governance techniques of three frontier strongmen of the Cagayan Valley; the late Lieutenant Colonel Rodolfo Aguinaldo, Dr Manuel Mamba of Tuao and Mr Delfin Ting of Tuguegarao City, the book argues that the success of Philippine post-colonial statecraft hinges on the integration of the provinces into the state's mechanisms of power. This is an important study which students and scholars in International Relations, Anthropology, History and Politics will find most valuable, as the strategic and geopolitical significance of the Philippines becomes increasingly apparent. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Pak Nung WongPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: I.B. Tauris Edition: NIPPOD ISBN: 9780755655830ISBN 10: 0755655834 Pages: 358 Publication Date: 27 June 2024 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsContents List of Illustrations List of Maps List of Tables List of Figures and Boxes List of Abbreviations Glossary Notes on Transliteration and Currency About the Book Preface 1. Introduction: Toward an Approach of Post-colonial Statecraft in Southeast Asia. 2.Landscape of the Rhizomes: Cagayan Valley, 1972-2009 3. Localising Sovereignty: Contours of a Reflexive Sociology of Post-colonial Statecraft in Southeast Asia. 4. Capillaries of the State: The Padrino (Power/Knowledge) System. 5. Sovereignty Re-enacted: Phillipine Art for Governing African Coups. 6. Sovereignty Policed: Disciplinary and Surveillance Techniques in the Itawes Phillipines. 7. Exceptional Democracy: Conceiving Phillipine Elections as a Sovereignty-making Pinball Machine. 8. Sovereignty Deflected: Discursive Resistance to State Justice. 9. Conclusion: The Frontiers Revisited. Notes Bibliography Index.ReviewsAuthor InformationPak Nung Wong is an assistant professor at the Department of Applied Social Studies, City University of Hong Kong, where he teaches political sociology, qualitative research methods, security studies and social theory at the undergraduate and postgraduate levels. In 2001, he was simultaneously awarded the Sir Edward Youde Memorial Fellowship and the Sir John Swire Scholarship by the Hong Kong government and Oxford University respectively. He completed his doctoral study at St. Antony's College, Oxford in 2006. His books include: In Search of the State-in-Society (2009) and Farewell to the Crown Colony (2011). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |