Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: Kokang - The Rise of the Chinese Minority – The New Neo-Liberal State?.- Chapter 3: Laiza - Kachin Borderlands-Life after the Ceasefire.- Chapter 4: Post-Nargis Lives - After the Storm - Comes the New Hope?.- Chapter 5: Mangroves in Myanmar: Conflicts and Impacts.- Chapter 6: Sustainability in Pa-O Forest: Will There Be Hope for the Locals?.
Walaiporn Tantikanangkul is an associated editor at the Regional Center for Social Science and Sustainable Development (RCSD), Faculty of Social Sciences, Chiang Mai University. She was a former Director of the Humanities Academic Services (HAS) Center, Faculty of Humanities, Chiang Mai University. With her MA in Linguistics in Education - her research focused on language and communication and discourse analysis - she has presented language and power, and comparative studies of academic writing in Thailand, USA and UK. She has taught at a refugee camp in Thailand, teaching English for refugees from Cambodia and Laos accepted for resettlement in USA. Having lived in UK for 20 years, she has worked with refugees from Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Ethiopia and Tibet, and taught Thai for adults, including from Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) and Ministry of Defence (MoD), at School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS). She is founder of a free e-magazine on socio-political issues in Thailand.
Ashley Pritchard is an independent expert on
Myanmar, based in Yangon. She graduated with a MA in International
Development Studies at Chulalongkorn University, Thailand. She authored and
co-authored several books and papers on corporate accountability in ASEAN,
tourism development and its impact on human rights in Myanmar.
She possesses over eight years of practical experience in developing
innovative programs and projects targeting underserved populations in
the field of improving human rights, corporate accountability, good
governance and transparency, rule of law and livelihoods, and also in project
management and evaluation. Her work also involves community and government
support, development of key coalitions, and negotiation of contracts for community,
social, environmental and economic benefit particularly in Myanmar. Her
involvement in research reflects her deep commitment to improving the lives of
the disenfranchised and marginalized through international development and human
rights policies.