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An Oxford Forum for New Perspectives On Burma/Myanmar

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Tag: USDP

  • Opinion

The Geopolitics of Myanmar-China Relations after the Coup: China’s Geostrategic Calculations Towards Myanmar’s Coup

  • by teacircleoxford
  • Posted on June 7, 2021January 28, 2022

Julian (pseudonym) outlines China’s geostrategic calculations and ambitions in Myanmar. Read the Burmese version here.

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  • Opinion

Myanmar’s Search for Normalcy in an Abnormal World

  • by teacircleoxford
  • Posted on September 17, 2020March 9, 2022

Matthew Arnold discusses the importance of seeing Myanmar as a country undergoing normalization.

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  • Essay

Testing the Water: the 2018 By-Elections and Myanmar’s Political Future

  • by teacircleoxford
  • Posted on December 19, 2018February 3, 2019

Han Htoo Khant Paing and Richard Roewer analyze how political parties have changed their campaign…

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  • 2018 Year in Review

Myanmar’s Freedom of Expression as a Broken Promise of the NLD

  • by teacircleoxford
  • Posted on May 30, 2018June 20, 2018

Yaw Bawm Mangshang analyzes the status of press freedom under the NLD-led government. This post…

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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

  • Real Stories not Tales: Story of Su

    June 29, 2022
  • Rethinking Rebel Governance and Conflict Studies in/through Myanmar

    June 28, 2022
  • အစိုးရမဟုတ်သောအဖွဲ့အစည်းမှဝန်ထမ်းတစ်ဦး၏အမြင် ဒီမိုကရေစီသေဆုံးသွားသည့် အတွက် လူ့အခွင့်အရေးတိုက်ပွဲဝင်ရခြင်း

    June 27, 2022

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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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