ID | 117735 |
Title Proper | From the street to the ballot box |
Other Title Information | the July 2011 elections and the rise of social movements in Thailand |
Language | ENG |
Author | Kuhonta, Erik M ; Sinpeng, Aim |
Publication | 2012. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The July 2011 parliamentary elections in Thailand were significant because they ushered politics away from street demonstrations and into the polling booth. Just about a year after the worst political violence in Bangkok since the 1992 Black May incident, these elections confirmed the dominance of Thaksin Shinawatra-aligned parties and the prominence of social movements in engaging the electoral process. Notable were the Red Shirts who moved from street battle to electoral contestation in supporting Phua Thai and the Yellow Shirts who campaigned against politicians and political parties. No election in Thai history has had such a high degree of social mobilization as that of the 2011 polls. |
`In' analytical Note | Contemporary Southeast Asia Vol. 34, No.3; Dec 2012: p.389-415 |
Journal Source | Contemporary Southeast Asia Vol. 34, No.3; Dec 2012: p.389-415 |
Key Words | Elections ; Democracy ; Social Movements ; Polarization ; Thailand |