FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “local communities”

Showing 21 - 30 of 101

Image-Content

THAILAND

Migrants face changing climate

Spectrum, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 01/07/2018

» The arrival of May once reminded Lin Na that the first rain of the year was on its way. The ground in her small village of Prey Veng province in southern Cambodia would start to soften, dampened by rainfall. This time each year, she would help her family cultivate a two-hectare rice field, the main source of food and income for them throughout the year.

Image-Content

OPINION

Vietnam locals reap little from tourist boom

News, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 28/06/2018

» Scenes of visitors crowding around a dozen local fishermen on a beach to watch them pull their fishing nets out of the water may sound strange but it has become a daily ritual in the tourist-magnet city of Danang, Vietnam, as I found out during a recent trip there.

Image-Content

OPINION

Growing pains for Myanmar amidst reform

News, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 17/05/2018

» When San Dar Aye, a young ethnic Mon woman living in Ye town in the south of Myanmar, showed me a vast mudflat where her fellow villagers had replanted a mangrove forest, she told me the saplings would be "the future" of their communities.

Image-Content

THAILAND

How women pay the costs of development

Spectrum, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 11/03/2018

» Heading down a dirt road, Khampan Suprom zigzags her motorcycle through the grove, passing a small reservoir and plantation on the way. She comes to park under some trees. Dressed in her gardening apron and rain boots, she dismounts and drifts towards her vegetable garden.

Image-Content

OPINION

Law is an ass when dealing with the elite

News, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 09/03/2018

» Expressed through graffiti and drawings, pictures and words on social media, a slain black leopard, a rare and protected species, has become a symbol of victims of the wealthy and powerful at the hands of the seemingly impotent justice system. It is used to remind people that the rich often have privileges to escape charges and jail while being able to keep their business empires intact.

Image-Content

OPINION

Thainess: History doesn't repeat, but rhymes

News, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 01/02/2018

» The government's rolling out of its new Thai Niyom, or "Thainess", campaign, is a classic case of a military regime attempting to survive a downturn in popularity.

Image-Content

THAILAND

Cutting through the haze

Spectrum, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 24/12/2017

» By the end of the year, the northern provinces of Thailand will be put on high alert for summer haze. The conditions from February to April are dry, increasing the risk of wildfires. But it's also the period when farmers light fires to clear their land for crop cultivation -- flames which could spread into forest areas, sending up haze and acting as a huge source of carbon emission.

Image-Content

OPINION

Ignorance no excuse for generals' ire

News, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 01/12/2017

» Two of our national leaders' recent verbal onslaught against anti-coal protesters in Songkhla province seems unfair to me. Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha called them people who "attacked" police officers during the clash on Monday. His deputy, Gen Prawit Wongsuwon, labelled them as "hard core".

Image-Content

THAILAND

Weathering water's extremes

Spectrum, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 12/11/2017

» Since downpours from the North swept down into the central Chao Phraya River basin early last month, people are fearfully bracing for the next big flood to hit Bangkok. The Thai government tells the public it is making a concentrated effort to ensure the capital will be protected from future flooding. Despite the heavy rainfall this year, leaders have dismissed the possibility of another flood like 2011's.

Image-Content

THAILAND

Lost in translation: migrant patients face language gap

Spectrum, Paritta Wangkiat, Published on 05/11/2017

» Standing at the seaside pier in Ranong province, the noise of engines never really cuts out.