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An Oxford Forum for New Perspectives On Burma/Myanmar

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Tag: 21st Century Panglong Conference

  • 2018 Year in Review

Stalemate and Suspicion: An Appraisal of the Myanmar Peace Process

  • by teacircleoxford
  • Posted on June 6, 2018July 8, 2018

Bobby Anderson explores fundamental—and often, incompatible—differences in perception between Myanmar’s military, civilian, and insurgent authorities.

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  • 2018 Year in Review

Law & Constitutionalism in Myanmar: A Year in Review

  • by Jesse Hartery
  • Posted on May 24, 2018June 20, 2018

Jesse Hartery discusses some of the legal and constitutional changes in Myanmar over the last…

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  • Essay

Political Communication and Transformative Citizenship in Myanmar (Part II)

  • by matthewjwalton
  • Posted on September 7, 2017September 7, 2017

Matthew J Walton highlights aspects of citizenship that are often ignored.

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  • Essay

Political Communication and Transformative Citizenship in Myanmar (Part I)

  • by matthewjwalton
  • Posted on September 6, 2017September 7, 2017

Matthew J Walton highlights aspects of citizenship that are often ignored.

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  • Opinion

Myanmar’s Myths of Ethnic Unity

  • by matthewjwalton
  • Posted on July 13, 2017August 21, 2017

Matthew J Walton muses on the effects of misleading narratives of the independence era.

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  • 21st Century Panglong

“Panglong Spirit” under the 2008 Constitution (Part II)

  • by maelraynaud
  • Posted on August 16, 2016January 2, 2018

Editor’s Note: Today’s post is a follow-up to a previous post, “‘Panglong Spirit’ under the 2008…

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  • 21st Century Panglong

“Panglong Spirit” under the 2008 Constitution

  • by maelraynaud
  • Posted on July 22, 2016January 2, 2018

Editor’s Note: The text that follows was written by Mael Raynaud and is the seventh…

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  • 21st Century Panglong

Mobilising the Myth of Panglong?

  • by teacircleoxford
  • Posted on July 13, 2016July 13, 2016

Editor’s note: The following post, by Richard Dolan, is the sixth in our series on the…

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  • 21st Century Panglong

How the NLD Can Fulfill Its Promise of Peace? (Part II)

  • by teacircleoxford
  • Posted on July 8, 2016

Editor’s note: Today, we continue our forum on Panglong with the second installment of an article by Bertil Lintner,…

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(Photo Credit, Felix Schwarz/Freedom House)
  • 21st Century Panglong

How the NLD Can Fulfill Its Promise of Peace? (Part I)

  • by teacircleoxford
  • Posted on July 6, 2016December 19, 2016

Editor’s note: This week, in two posts, we continue our forum on Panglong with the…

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Series: COVID-19 and Myanmar

ကိုဗစ်-၁၉  နှင့် မြန်မာရာသီဥတုပြောင်းလဲခြင်းဆိုင်ရာ လူငယ်တို့၏  တက်ကြွ လှုပ်ရှား မှု

COVID-19 Policy Response Needs and Opportunities

Wavering at the Turning Point: Myanmar’s response to COVID-19 in March 2020

Tea Circle’s Book Reviews

The City and the Wilderness: Indo-Persian Encounters in Southeast Asia, Arash Khazeni, University of California Press, 2020, 264 pages.

Perspectives on War, Peace, and Rebel Politics: Introduction

Myanmar’s Buddhist-Muslim Crisis: Rohingya, Arakanese, and Burmese Narratives of Siege and Fear, by John Holt. Honolulu, Hawaii. University of Hawaii Press, 2019. 301pp.

Myanmar Media in Transition: Legacies, Challenges and Change, edited by Lisa Brooten, Jane Madlyn McElhone and Gayathry Venkiteswaran, ISEAS, Singapore, 2019, 407 Pages.

Myanmar Transformed? People, Places and Politics edited by Justine Chambers, Gerard McCarthy, Nicholas Farrelly and Chit Win, ISEAS, Singapore, 2018, 333 Pages.

Border Capitalism, Disrupted: Precarity and Struggle in a Southeast Asian Industrial Zone by Stephen Campbell. Cornell University Press, 2018. 206 Pages.

Recent Posts

  • မြန်မာနိုင်ငံတွင် အာဏာသိမ်းရန် ကြိုးပမ်းမှုဖြစ်ပေါ်ပြီးနောက် ကမ္ဘာလုံးဆိုင်ရာအထည်ချုပ်အမှတ်တံဆိပ်များ အနေဖြင့် အလုပ်သမားအခွင့်အရေး များကို အကာအကွယ်ပေးနိုင်ခြင်းကင်းမဲ့နေ

    January 25, 2023
  • How has Myanmar’s military stalled collapse from CDM-inflicted damage?

    January 17, 2023
  • Deification of Teachers in Burma: Why the Tradition of Paying Respect to Teachers should be Abolished

    January 5, 2023

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The opinions expressed on this website belong to the authors alone, and do not reflect the views of the editors, the Centre for Southeast Asian Studies, the Asian Institute, the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy or the University of Toronto.

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