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OPINION

Puey's passage stirs up old questions, issues

News, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 11/03/2016

» As Thai society has been caught up in a cultish and contentious search for the khon dee, or "good people", few can be more justifiably glorified than Puey Ungphakorn, a heroic Thai patriot from the Second World War and a quintessential technocrat who worked under military-authoritarian rule without selling his soul to it. This week marks the centennial of his life, with an outpouring of tributes and adulations around campuses and offices and in the minds of many. The questions and issues that preoccupied him in his prime throughout the 1950s-70s are still at the heart of what ails Thai society today.

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OPINION

Punishment, crime and justice in Thailand

News, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 04/03/2016

» Thailand's political polarisation knows no bounds. The raging controversy over media personality Sorrayuth Suthassanachinda's criminal conviction is merely the latest manifestation of a morality war being waged in Thai politics over the past decade between the rightful and the righteous for the country's future power and soul. While it does not seem that way on the surface in Sorrayuth's case, closer scrutiny indicates otherwise. The case also instructs us that such polarisation is no good for Thailand, that middle and third ways are still the only pathway out of the country's holding position.

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OPINION

Between authoritarianism and democracy

News, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 22/01/2016

» So far in the 21st century, political fortunes in Southeast Asian states have been mixed. As the world's only region that harbours all political regimes from absolutism in Brunei and authoritarianism in Thailand to thriving democracy in Indonesia and communist one-party rule in Vietnam, Southeast Asia's political future will likely be sandwiched between a rule by the few and government by the majority. The determinant of future regime pathways in this region may well be the performance of China on one hand and India and Japan on the other, the largest and most consequent major powers in the neighbourhood.

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OPINION

Thailand's rocky road for 2016 and beyond

News, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 08/01/2016

» No country in Southeast Asia has been shooting itself in the foot more than Thailand. With so much going for it, the second-largest economy in the region manages to underperform spectacularly. Its growth trajectory is in the 2-3% range while it has the potential to track twice as high.

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OPINION

'Withdrawal' lessons from Prof Anderson

News, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 18/12/2015

» Paragraph per paragraph, no single article analyses Thai politics with as much incision, depth and rigour as that of Benedict Richard O'Gorman Anderson, the long-time, legendary Cornell University intellectual who taught several generations of students specialising in Southeast Asian studies and inspired many more.

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OPINION

Divisiveness of the Trans-Pacific Partnership

News, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 16/10/2015

» Although the full text of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) has yet to be publicly released, the recently announced trade pact among 12 nations in the Asia-Pacific has already caused shockwaves around the world.

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OPINION

Shrine saga throws up bluster, but few facts

News, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 28/08/2015

» The fog of Thai crisis management can be thick and heavy. Almost a fortnight after a powerful bomb explosion rocked the landmark Erawan shrine area in central Bangkok and claimed 20 lives with scores of injuries, Thai authorities have made just about zero progress.

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OPINION

Discipline key to avoiding financial crisis

News, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 24/07/2015

» Without exception, financial blow-ups require commensurate bailouts. The stories across global financial crises are fundamentally similar, and the ensuing blame game the same, from Greece's ongoing turmoil to Thailand's implosion almost two decades ago. Notwithstanding countless post-mortems so far and those on the way, the inescapable and essential lessons from the Greek debacle are simple: Beware of indebtedness, and incur debt with discipline.

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OPINION

Language is way forward in deep South

News, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 03/07/2015

» In multi-ethnic and multi-cultural societies, language is about more than communication. It is about recognition and accommodation, power and power-sharing. When society fosters power-sharing and forges compromise and consensus to underpin societal cohesion and achieve relative peace at home, the role of official and national languages can be powerful and paramount.

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OPINION

A south-south opportunity emerges in global power shift

Oped, Thitinan Pongsudhirak, Published on 01/05/2015

» A tectonic power shift in the global arena is an emerging phenomenon that is no longer in doubt. Why, and to what end, this profound power shift in the international system is taking place at this time, however, remains a matter of dispute.