泰国南部宗教和语言少数群体歧视的语境化

Q3 Social Sciences Muslim World Journal of Human Rights Pub Date : 2021-04-01 DOI:10.1515/mwjhr-2020-0025
Christopher M. Joll
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引用次数: 3

摘要

摘要:本文探讨了专家如何将学术研究运用到工作中,制定以证据为基础的政策,寻求和平解决泰国南部以马来穆斯林为主的省份长期存在的、复杂的、迄今为止棘手的冲突。我认为,需要的不仅仅是经验数据,而且对这一冲突的现有分析往往缺乏理论支撑,并且忽视了曼谷推行影响其民族语言和民族宗教多元化公民的政策的更广泛的历史背景。我展示了两者相互作用的效用,与社会理论家所写的“宗教”和语言有什么共同之处和没有共同之处,以及两者在次国家冲突和比较历史分析中的相对重要性。本文批判性地介绍的案例研究比较了针对一系列少数民族的民族语言和民族宗教沙文主义章节,包括集中在北大年省,雅拉省和那拉提瓦省南部的马来穆斯林公民。其中包括泰国东北部的佛教少数民族,以及二战期间被广泛称为泰国民族主义高潮的天主教社区。我认为,马来人南部经历的这些发人深省的方面需要被语境化——甚至去个例化。
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Contextualizing Discrimination of Religious and Linguistic Minorities in South Thailand
Abstract This article explores how scholarship can be put to work by specialists penning evidence-based policies seeking peaceful resolutions to long-standing, complex, and so-far intractable conflict in the Malay-Muslim dominated provinces of South Thailand. I contend that more is required than mere empirical data, and that the existing analysis of this conflict often lacks theoretical ballast and overlooks the wider historical context in which Bangkok pursued policies impacting its ethnolinguistically, and ethnoreligiously diverse citizens. I demonstrate the utility of both interacting with what social theorists have written about what “religion” and language do—and do not—have in common, and the relative importance of both in sub-national conflicts, and comparative historical analysis. The case studies that this article critically introduces compare chapters of ethnolinguistic and ethnoreligious chauvinism against a range of minorities, including Malay-Muslim citizens concentrated in the southern provinces of Pattani, Yala, and Narathiwat. These include Buddhist ethnolinguistic minorities in Thailand’s Northeast, and Catholic communities during the second world war widely referred to as the high tide of Thai ethno-nationalism. I argue that these revealing aspects of the southern Malay experience need to be contextualized—even de-exceptionalized.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: Muslim World Journal of Human Rights promises to serve as a forum in which barriers are bridged (or at least, addressed), and human rights are finally discussed with an eye on the Muslim world, in an open and creative manner. The choice to name the journal, Muslim World Journal of Human Rights reflects a desire to examine human rights issues related not only to Islam and Islamic law, but equally those human rights issues found in Muslim societies that stem from various other sources such as socio-economic and political factors, as well the interaction and intersections of the two areas. MWJHR welcomes submissions that apply the traditional human right framework in their analysis as well as those that transcend the boundaries of contemporary scholarship in this regard. Further, the journal also welcomes inter-disciplinary and/or comparative approaches to the study of human rights in the Muslim world in an effort to encourage the emergence of new methodologies in the field. Muslim World Journal of Human Rights recognizes that several highly contested debates in the field of human rights have been reflected in the Muslim world but have frequently taken on their own particular manifestation in accordance with the varying contexts of contemporary Muslim societies.
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