481
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Shifting Sands, Land from the Sea: A Microhistory of Coastal Land Titling in Thailand

Pages 438-458 | Received 23 Aug 2021, Accepted 09 May 2023, Published online: 11 Jul 2023

References

  • Auyero, Javier. 2012. Patients of the State: The Politics of Waiting in Argentina. Chapel Hill: Duke University Press.
  • Bakker, Karen. 2012. Water: Political, Biopolitical, Material. Social Studies of Science, 42(4):616–623.
  • Barbesgaard, Mads. 2018. Blue Growth: Savior or Ocean Grabbing? The Journal of Peasant Studies, 45(1):130–149.
  • Barnes, Jessica & Samer Alatout. 2012. Water Worlds: Introduction to the Special Issue of Social Studies of Science. Social Studies of Science, 42(4):483–488.
  • Barney, Keith. 2016. Land and Loyalty: Security and the Development of Property Rights in Thailand. By Tomas Larsson. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2012. Xii, 208 Pp. ISBN 9780801450815 (Cloth). The Journal of Asian Studies, 75:270–273.
  • Basso, Keith H. 1996. Wisdom Sits in Places: Landscape and Language among the Western Apache. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
  • Benda-Beckmann, Franz von, Keebet von Benda-Beckmann & Melanie Wiber (eds). 2006. The Properties of Property. In Changing Properties of Property, 1–39. Oxford: Berghahn Books.
  • Bhattacharyya, Debjani. 2018. Empire and Ecology in the Bengal Delta: The Making of Calcutta. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Blomley, Nicholas. 2008. Simplification is Complicated: Property, Nature, and the Rivers of Law. Environment and Planning A, 40:1825–1842.
  • Blundo, Giorgio, Jean-Pierre Olivier de-Sardan, N. Bako Arifari & M. Tidjani Alou. 2006. Everyday Corruption and the State: Citizens and Public Officials in Africa. Cape Town: Zed Books.
  • Cassiniti, Julia. 2022. Up in smoke: cosmopolitical ecologies and the disappearing spirits of the land in Thailand's agricultural air pollution. In Cosmopolitical Ecologies Across Asia: Places and Practices of Power in Changing Environments, edited by Riamsara Kuyakanon, Hildegard Diemberger and David Sneath, 62–80. London: Routledge.
  • Castree, Noel & Bruce Braun. 2001. Socializing Nature: Theory, Practice, and Politics. In Social Nature: Theory, Practice, and Politics, edited by Noel Castree and Bruce Braun, 1–21. Oxford: Blackwell.
  • Cheevaporn, Voravit & Piamsak Menasveta. 2003. Water Pollution and Habitat Degradation in the Gulf of Thailand. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 47(1):43–51.
  • Das, Veena. 2004. The Signature of the State: The Paradox of Illegibility. In Anthropology in the Margins of the State, edited by Veena Das and Deborah Poole, 225–252. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.
  • Dewan, Camelia & Knut Nustad. This Issue. Introduction to Special Issue. Fluid Dispossessions: Contested Waters in Capitalist Natures. Ethnos: Journal of Anthropology.
  • Fairhead, James, Melissa Leach & Ian Scoones. 2012. Green Grabbing: A New Appropriation of Nature? The Journal of Peasant Studies, 39(2):237–261.
  • Foucault, Michel. 1988. Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviews and Other Writings, 1972–1977. 1st American ed.). New York: Random House.
  • Ghobrial, John-Paul A. 2019. Introduction: Seeing the World Like a Microhistorian. Past & Present, 242(Supplement 14):1–22.
  • Götz, Johanna M. & Carl Middleton. 2020. Ontological Politics of Hydrosocial Territories in the Salween River Basin, Myanmar/Burma. Political Geography, 78:102115.
  • Gupta, Akhil. 1995. Blurred Boundaries: The Discourse of Corruption, the Culture of Politics, and the Imagined State. American Ethnologist, 22(2):375–402.
  • Gupta, Akhil. 2012. Red Tape: Bureaucracy, Structural Violence, and Poverty in India. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
  • Gupta, Akhil & Aradhana Sharma. 2006. Globalization and Postcolonial States. Current Anthropology, 47(2):277–307.
  • Hall, Derek. 2012. Rethinking Primitive Accumulation: Theoretical Tensions and Rural Southeast Asian Complexities’. Antipode, 44(4):1188–1208.
  • Haraway, Donna. 1988. Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective. Feminist Studies, 14(3):575–599.
  • Haraway, Donna, Noboru Ishikawa, Scott F. Gilbert, Kenneth Olwig, Anna L. Tsing & Nils Bubandt. 2016. Anthropologists Are Talking – About the Anthropocene. Ethnos, 81(3):535–564.
  • Harvey, David. 2004. The ‘New’ Imperialism: Accumulation by Dispossession. Socialist Register, 40:63–87.
  • Herzfeld, Michael. 2005. Political Optics and the Occlusion of Intimate Knowledge. American Anthropologist, 107(3):369–376.
  • Herzfeld, Michael. 2014. Cultural Intimacy: Social Poetics in the Nation-State. London: Routledge.
  • Hetherington, Kregg. 2009. Privatizing the Private in Rural Paraguay: Precarious Lots and the Materiality of Rights. American Ethnologist, 36(2):224–241.
  • Heyman, Josiah. 2004. The Anthropology of Power-Wielding Bureaucracies. Human Organization, 63(4):487–500.
  • Heyman, Josiah. 2012. ‘Deepening the Anthropology of Bureaucracy’ Edited by A. Gupta, K. Hetherington, and M. S. Hull. Anthropological Quarterly, 85(4):1269–1277.
  • Hull, Matthew S. 2012a. Government of Paper: The Materiality of Bureaucracy in Urban Pakistan. Oakland: University of California Press.
  • Hull, Matthew S. 2012b. Documents and Bureaucracy. Annual Review of Anthropology, 41:251–267.
  • Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. 2021. Summary for Policymakers. In Climate Change 2021: The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, edited by Valérie Masson-Delmotte , P. Zhai, A. Pirani, S. L. Connors, C. Péan, S. Berger, N. Caud, Y. Chen, L. Goldfarb, M. I. Gomis, M. Huang, K. Leitzell, E. Lonnoy, J.B.R. Matthews, T. K. Maycock, T. Waterfield, O. Yelekçi, R. Yu and B. Zhou, 4–36. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Johnson, Andrew Alan. 2020. Mekong Dreaming: Life and Death Along a Changing River. Chapel Hill: Duke University Press.
  • Knapp, Riamsara Kuyakanon. 2014. When Does ‘Fieldwork’ Begin? Negotiating Pre-Field Ethical Challenges: Experiences in ‘the Academy’ and Planning Fieldwork in Bhutan. In Fieldwork in the Global South: Ethical Challenges and Dilemmas, edited by Jenny Lunn, 13–24. Abingdon: Routledge.
  • Kuyakanon, Riamsara, Hildegard Diemberger & David Sneath (eds). 2022. Cosmopolitical Ecologies Across Asia: Places and Practices of Power in Changing Environments. London: Routledge.
  • Larsson, Tomas. 2012. Land and Loyalty: Security and the Development of Property Rights in Thailand. Cornell Studies in Political Economy Series. Cornell University Press.
  • Levien, Michael. 2011. Special Economic Zones and Accumulation by Dispossession in India. Journal of Agrarian Change, 11(4):454–483.
  • Li, Tania Murray. 2014a. Land’s End: Capitalist Relations on an Indigenous Frontier. Chapel Hill: Duke University Press.
  • Li, Tania Murray. 2014b. What Is Land? Assembling a Resource for Global Investment. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 39:589–602.
  • Marks, Danny, Michelle Ann Miller & Sujitra Vassanadumrongdee. 2020. The Geopolitical Economy of Thailand’s Marine Plastic Pollution Crisis’. Asia Pacific Viewpoint, 61(2):266–282.
  • Marx, Karl. 1995 [1867]. Capital: A Critique of Political Economy. Vol. I Book One: The Process of Production of Capital. First English Edition of 1887. Edited by F. Engels. Moscow: Progress Publishers.
  • McCargo, Duncan. 2014. Competing Notions of Judicialization in Thailand. Contemporary Southeast Asia, 36(3):417–441.
  • McCargo, Duncan. 2015a. Transitional Justice and Its Discontents. Journal of Democracy, 26(2):5–20.
  • McCargo, Duncan. 2015b. Readings on Thai Justice: A Review Essay. Asian Studies Review, 39(1):23–37.
  • McCormack, Fiona. 2017. Private Oceans: The Enclosure and the Marketisation of the Seas. London: Pluto Press.
  • Mehta, Lyla, Gert Jan Veldwisch & Jennifer Franco. 2012. Introduction to the Special Issue: Water Grabbing? Focus on the (Re)Appropriation of Finite Water Resources. Water Alternatives, 5(2):15.
  • Nustad, Knut G. 2020. Notes on the Political Ecology of Time: Temporal Aspects of Nature and Conservation in a South African World Heritage Site. Geoforum 111:94–104.
  • OED Online. 2021. Oxford University Press. ‘alluvion, n.’. https://www-oed-com (accessed 29 July 2021).
  • Povinelli, Elizabeth. 2002. The Cunning of Recognition: Indigenous Alterities and the Making of Australian Multiculturalism. Chapel Hill: Duke University Press.
  • Rose, Gillian. 1997. Situating Knowledges: Positionality, Reflexivities and Other Tactics. Progress in Human Geography 21(3):305–320.
  • Sage, Daniel J. 2006. The New Imperialism. The Professional Geographer, 58(1):114–117.
  • Scott, James C. 1999. Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Subramanian, Ajantha. 2009. Shorelines: Space and Rights in South India. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  • Suvapepun, Sunee. 1991. Long Term Ecological Changes in the Gulf of Thailand. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 23:213–217.
  • Swyngedouw, Erik. 1999. Modernity and Hybridity: Nature, Regeneracionismo, and the Production of the Spanish Waterscape, 1890–1930. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 89(3):443–465.
  • Vandergeest, Peter & Nancy Lee Peluso. 1995. Territorialization and State Power in Thailand. Theory and Society, 24(3):385–426.
  • Watts, Michael. 2015. Interview with Michael Watts - on Nigeria, Political Ecology, Geographies of Violence, and the History of the Discipline. http://societyandspace.com/material/interviews/interview-with-michael-watts-on-nigeria-political-ecology-geographies-of-violence-and-the-history-of-the-discipline/.