Political Transition in Myanmar: A New Model for Democratisation
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South, Ashley
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Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS)
Abstract
This article examines social and political transition in Myanmar (Burma).
Strategies for transition in Myanmar have tended to focus on elite-level
politics, rather than grass-roots democratisation and social mobilisation.
However, both approaches are necessary - although neither is sufficient in
itself. While change at the national/elite level is urgently required, sustained
democratic transition can only be achieved if accompanied by local
participation.
¶
The tentative re-emergence of civil society networks within and between ethnic
nationality/ minority communities over the past decade is one of the most
significant - but under-examined - aspects of the social and political situation
in Myanmar. ‘Development from below’, and efforts to build local democracy from
the ‘bottom-up’, using local capacities and social capital, are underway in
government-controlled areas, and in some ethnic nationality-populated ceasefire
and war zones (including insurgent-controlled areas), as well as in neighbouring
countries. However, the sector is still under-developed, and changes coming from
civil society will be gradual, and need to be supported.
¶
This article examines the strategic challenges facing ethnic nationalist leaders
and communities at this key period in Myanmar’s history. It also addresses the
roles that foreign aid can play in supporting the re-emergence of civil society
in Myanmar, and advocates a policy of selective (or targeted) engagement’.
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Contemporary Southeast Asia: A Journal of International and Strategic Affairs, Vol. 26., No.2, August 2004
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Contemporary Southeast Asia
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