schema:description | "内容記述: 1. Studying people often called Karen, Ronald D. Renard; PART I. Negotiating an ethnic identity; Introduction, to Part I, John McKinnon; 2. Constructing marginality: The 'hill tribe' Karen and their shifting locations within Thai state and public perspectives, Pinkaew Laungaramsri; 3. Trapped in environmental discourse and politics of exclusion: Karen in the Thung Yai Naresuan Wildlife Sanctuary in the context of forest and hill tribe policies in Thailand, Reiner Buergin; 4. Community culture: Strengthening persistence to empower resistance, John McKinnon; PART II.. Social practices and transformations: Courtship, marriage, and changing sexual morality: Introduction, to Part II, Yoko Hayami; 5. Living for funerals: Karen teenagers and romantic love, Christina Fink; 6. Morality, sexuality and mobility: Changing moral discourse and self, Yoko Hayami; 7. When it is better to sing than to speak: The use of traditional verses (hta) in tense social situations, Roland Mischung; PART III. Social and economic adaptation to government development policies: Introduction to Part III, Claudio O. Delang; 8. Social and economic adaptations to a changing landscape: Realities, opportunities and constraints, Claudio O. Delang; 9. The Karen in transition from shifting cultivation to permanent farming: Testing tools for participatory land use planning at local level, Oliver Puginier; Afterword: The politics of 'Karen-ness' in Thailand, Charles F. Keyes....(more)" |