It was the first time Meisun sae Chao, a descendant of a Chinese soldier in the Kuomintang army, had felt true happiness.
The woman, who was born and lives on the mountain of Doi Mae Salong, had just become a Thai under the government’s naturalisation scheme.
Sharing the happiness in a ceremony to take an oath of [...]
Entries Tagged as 'China'
Kuominthai after almost 40 years
June 15th, 2008 by Nicholas Farrelly · 6 Comments
Tags: China · Northern Thailand · Trans-Border Issues
Puer tea - store with care!
June 10th, 2008 by Jinghong Zhang, Guest Contributor · 5 Comments
[One fascinating aspect of the latest wave of commercialization in the borderlands of China and southeast Asia is the dramatic revival in popularity of Yunnan's Puer tea. Jinghong Zhang is a PhD student at the Australian National University who is studying the production, marketing and consumption of Puer tea. She has provided this brief report [...]
Mekong navigation and the great garlic puzzle
June 5th, 2008 by Andrew Walker · 1 Comment
A chinese boat unloading apples in Chiang Saen in 1994
Timothy Hamlin of the Stimson Center has written this update on commercial navigation on the upper-Mekong. It seems that the environmentally dubious project of blasting the Mekong rapids between southern China and northern Thailand is now all but complete, making the way for a greater influx [...]
Tags: China · Environment · Laos · Thailand · The Mekong · Trans-Border Issues · Yunnan
The white-handed gibbon and science in Southeast Asia
May 20th, 2008 by Nicholas Farrelly · 2 Comments
A scientific team, consisting of members of the Gibbon Conservation Alliance based at Zurich University and the Kunming Institute of Zoology, as well as staff members of the Nangunhe National Nature Reserve, carried out a survey in all Chinese forests reported to support white-handed gibbons (Hylobates lar) during the last 20 years.
The species was last [...]
Tags: Asian Studies · China · Research Notes · Yunnan
Anthropological talk-fest in Kunming postponed?
May 7th, 2008 by Andrew Walker · 4 Comments
There are reliable reports circulating via email that the major International Congress on Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences to be held in July in Kunming has been postponed. At present the website for the conference does not have any mention of this. As one colleage commented, perhaps the conference - in which ethnic minority issues would, no doubt, feature [...]
Tags: Asian Studies · China · Conferences · Yunnan
Roads in the eastern Shan State
April 6th, 2008 by Nicholas Farrelly · 5 Comments
Prompted by the question from long-time contributor Roger Casas I thought I should put up some pictures of roads in the eastern Shan State. These shots are all, unfortunately, a bit dated (they were taken between 2002 and 2005) but should give readers a bit more of a feel for road infrastructure in the wedge of Shan territory between Thailand [...]
Tags: Shan State · Snapshots · Trans-Border Issues · Yunnan
Arrest of Tibetans in Laiza
April 1st, 2008 by Nicholas Farrelly · Add a Comment
Over the past couple of weeks the world has been trying to watch what is going on in Tibet. It was the biggest global “guns on streets” story of the month of March.Â
And now, in a footnote to the Chinese government’s wide-ranging crackdown on dissidents, the Kachin Independence Organisation (KIO) has handed two Tibetan activists back to [...]
Tags: Kachin State · Yunnan
Kunming to Bangkok road links
March 31st, 2008 by Nicholas Farrelly · 6 Comments
Here is a nice little video from The International Herald Tribune’s Thomas Fuller on road links from Kunming down into Southeast Asia. Thanks to long-time reader Paul for pointing it out.
Tags: China · Laos · Thailand · Trans-Border Issues
Communist garlic threatens Thai culture
March 5th, 2008 by Andrew Walker · 4 Comments
Regular New Mandala readers may know that I have a keen interest in garlic. I have previously blogged about the overstated impacts of the agricultural trade agreement between Thailand and China on Thai garlic producers. So, I was fascinated to read the following report from The Nation (thanks Maylee) which suggests that the traditional flavour of Thai [...]
Interview with Professor Janet Sturgeon
February 25th, 2008 by Nicholas Farrelly · 3 Comments
This post is part of New Mandala’s series of interviews with academics, activists and writers who contribute to major debates in mainland Southeast Asian Studies. These interviews are designed to probe the experiences, arguments and ideas that have helped shape the field. The eleventh in New Mandala’s series of discussions with prominent personalities is with Professor Janet Sturgeon from the Department [...]
Tags: Burma · China · Interviews · Northern Thailand · Trans-Border Issues · Yunnan











