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SALAMANCA, ALBERT (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   108325


Connecting lives, living, and location: mobility and spatial signatures in Northeast Thailand, 1982-2009 / Rigg, Jonathan; Salamanca, Albert   Journal Article
Rigg, Jonathan Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract This article explores mobility transitions in Thailand through the particular experience of two villages in Northeast Thailand over the period from the early 1980s through to 2009. The authors show through the mobility histories of Ban Non Tae and Ban Tha Song Korn that, while rural settlements may have always had a greater degree of mobility than the sedentary peasant paradigm suggests, important changes have taken place over the last quarter of a century in how that mobility is manifested. Personal mobility has increased; the migration of women has become as prevalent as that of men; and a mixture of daily commuting and more permanent moves have replaced seasonal circulation. In the process, mobility has created complex, multi-sited households; has led to a growing geriatrification of farming; and has altered the basis for livelihood sustainability and village resilience. Case studies of two individuals highlight these dynamics and add color to the themes the authors present. In making clear households' changing spatial signatures, the authors also seek to show how national and international development processes are imprinted in village and household histories.
Key Words Thailand  Mobility  Northeast Thailand  Householding 
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2
ID:   092965


Managing risk and vulnerability in Asia: a (re)study from Thailand, 1982-83 and 2008 / Rigg, Jonathan; Salamanca, Albert   Journal Article
Rigg, Jonathan Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract In the 1980s, rural settlements in the Northeast of Thailand were farming focused, and strategies of living were structured around the need to secure subsistence in the face of a capricious environment and a weak developmental state. More than half of households in the region lived below the poverty line, and the immediate prospects for 'development' were not bright. Drawing on a 25-year longitudinal study of two villages in Mahasarakham, the paper describes and reflects on how risk and vulnerability have been re-shaped during a quarter of a century of profound economic and social change. From largely environmental and local, the pattern of risk and opportunity have become increasingly economic and non-local as external events wash across the shores of rural settlements like Ban Non Tae and Ban Tha Song Korn.
Key Words Thailand  Risk  Vulnerability 
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