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BURMA - MYANMAR (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   051652


Burma file: a question of democracy / Myint, Soe 2003  Book
Myint, Soe Book
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Publication New Delhi, India Research Press, 2003.
Description 534p.hbk
Standard Number 8188353124
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
046420959.1/MYI 046420MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   085624


Burma vs Myanmar: what's in a name / Dittmer, Lowell   Journal Article
Dittmer, Lowell Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The State Law and Order Protection Council (SLORC) decided in 1989 (as decreed in the Adaptation of Expressions Law) that their country, heretofore referred to as Burma, was henceforth to be referred to (in English) as Myanmar, that Rangoon would be called Yangon, and so forth. The name Myanmar is taken from the literary form of the language, while the term Burma is derived from the spoken form (in Bamar, the language of the dominant ethnic group). Although the Burmese-language name of the country has included "Myanmar" since independence in 1948, some organizations, including Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD), prefer the spoken form "Burma" (which was also in use during the independence movement prior to 1948) and still use it in English. Because the political renaming came in the wake of the 1988 coup, this has given rise to a division between nominalists (those who consider names a matter of arbitrary convenience) and realists (those who think names mean something).
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3
ID:   085632


India's ambitions in Burma: more frustration than success / Egreteau, Renaud   Journal Article
Egreteau, Renaud Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract India has been pursuing a new Burma policy since 1993 to meet its emerging strategic interests in the region. This article assesses 15 years of this "velvet policy" toward Burma's military regime and argues that New Delhi has faced more frustration than satisfaction in achieving its strategic objectives as a result of this shift in policy.
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