家族纽带:泰国的权力下放、地方精英和省级行政组织

Yoshinori Nishizaki
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引用次数: 0

摘要

有关泰国地方政治的文献在21世纪初之前迅速增长,但近年来却有所减少。本文试图纠正这一趋势,通过强调一个独特的,但尚未充分研究的泰国省级选举动态。具体而言,本文主要利用泰语的原始资料,表明在泰国的大多数省份,省级行政组织,一个在1997年后权力下放时代获得前所未有的国家资金的选举机构,使有影响力的政治家族能够保留甚至增加他们的权力。随着政治和经济权力从曼谷分散,具有讽刺意味的是,这些权力一直集中在少数寡头统治的地方精英手中。这种现象并非历史偏差;相反,它应该被视为泰国持久的世袭文化的一种表现或产物,在这种文化中,公职人员的职位被视为其个人或家族财产的延伸。最后对泰国的案例进行了理论和比较的讨论。
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Family Ties that Bind: Decentralisation, Local Elites and the Provincial Administrative Organisations in Thailand
Growing rapidly before the early 2000s, literature on provincial Thai politics has dwindled in recent years. This article makes a small attempt to redress this trend by highlighting one distinctive yet understudied emerging electoral dynamics in provincial Thailand. Specifically, drawing mainly on Thai-language primary sources, this paper shows that in the majority of Thailand's provinces, the Provincial Administrative Organisation, an electoral institution that has received an unprecedented amount of state funding in the post-1997 age of decentralisation, has enabled influential political families to retain and even increase their power. As political and economic power has been decentralised from Bangkok, it has ironically been centralised in the hands of a limited number of oligarchic provincial elites. This phenomenon is not an historical aberration; rather, it should be viewed as one manifestation or product of Thailand's enduring patrimonial culture, in which public officeholders’ positions are regarded as an extension of their personal or familial property. I conclude by discussing the Thai case theoretically and comparatively.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: TRaNS approaches the study of Southeast Asia by looking at the region as a place that is defined by its diverse and rapidly-changing social context, and as a place that challenges scholars to move beyond conventional ideas of borders and boundedness. TRaNS invites studies of broadly defined trans-national, trans-regional and comparative perspectives. Case studies spanning more than two countries of Southeast Asia and its neighbouring countries/regions are particularly welcomed.
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