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Crime & immigrant youth
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ISBN: 0761916857 1322418381 145226337X 9781452263373 9781452232287 1452232288 9780761916840 0761916849 9780761916857 9781322418384 Year: 1999 Publisher: Thousand Oaks, Calif. : Sage Publications,

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Abstract

Crime and Immigrant Youth is a study of migration as a process that sometimes leads to youthful crime beyond the norms of either the home or host culture.


Book
General Ne Win’s Legacy of Burmanization in Myanmar : The Challenge to Peace in the Twenty-First Century
Authors: ---
ISBN: 981971270X Year: 2024 Publisher: Singapore : Springer Nature Singapore : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,

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This book focuses on how Burmanization created and reinforced ethnic divides since the 1962 coup d’etat. when General Ne Win concentrated all authority in the Burmese speaking army. Background research for the book includes Burmese language materials from the Burmese Socialist Party (BSP) and others that describe with what the BSP believed in their own terms. This is unique from previous works on the topic which either simply pointed out that the policies “didn’t work” and therefore are uninteresting, or to claim that they were “necessary” given the chaos of the previous regime. The authors agree that Ne Win’s policies “didn’t work.” However, the book goes further by elaborating why Burmanization policies developed in the 1960s are important for understanding Burmese society today. Most importantly, Ne Win’s ideology reflects how patterns of interethnic relationships in Myanmar lead to the “intractability” of the battles in early twenty-first century Myanmar. Saw Eh Htoo was born in the Irrawaddy River Delta in 1976, to a Karen family. He later moved to Yangon where he studied Philosophy (B.A.), Christian Studies (M.A.) and Cultural Anthropology (M.A.). At the time of his death he was completing his PhD dissertation at Payap University, Chiangmai, on which this book is based. He founded a Myanmar NGO Kaw Lah Foundation which did applied field research in Rakhine, Chin, Shan and Kayin (Karen) States; and Bago Region in Myanmar. Tony Waters is a Professor of Sociology currently at Leuphana University (Germany). Previously he taught at Payap University in Thailand, and at California State University, Chico, USA. He is the author of academic books and articles dealing with issues of social theory, East Africa, mainland Southeast Asia, refugees, and other sociological subjects.

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