Burma/Myanmar: Where Now?

AuthorZin, Min
PositionBook review

Burma/Myanmar: Where Now? Edited by Mikael Gravers and Flemming Ytzen. Thailand: Nordic Institute of Asia Studies Press, 2014. Softcover: 447pp.

Five years ago, a repressive junta controlled Myanmar with an iron grip. All observers considered the Southeast Asian country an unlikely case for political reforms. Much to the surprise of analysts, however, things changed in 2011, and since then the country has entered a period of dramatic reform. In Burma/Myanmar: Where Now?, Mikael Gravers and Flemming Ytzen attempt to guide readers into understanding Myanmar's rapidly changing transition.

The editors offer six good reasons for readers to browse the book: learn facts about the country, its history and diversity, its ongoing transition, its primary actors, and understand the discrepancy between optimistic expectations and stumbling blocks on the ground, and where and how to learn more.

Though the editors do not posit any unifying theme for their volume, many chapters emphasize the role of fear as one of the most influential factors in shaping modern Myanmar politics and the ongoing transition in particular. When it comes to the junta's decision to begin the transition, the editors and some contributors highlight the critical role of their fear of revenge from democratic forces (pp. 33-37, 150) and concern for China's influence in the country (pp. 100-3). The volume argues that the military leaders' fear of potential instability springing from the continued reforms means that "the military is not yet ready to give up the constitutional prerogatives" (p. 418). There are provisions included in the Constitution for the purposes of ensuring the military's continued role in determining the pace of reforms. They include the reservation of 25 per cent of parliamentary seats for military appointees, the military's control of key ministries and even the military's right to seize power again. The military's fear of state disintegration and the ethnic minorities' fear for their cultures are also cited as a major factor in an endless cycle of ethnic insurrection and state repression (p. 150). Ardeth Maung Thawnghmung observes that Myanmar "shares the concern of illegal immigration, anti-Islamic sentiments and fear of radical Islam movements with other countries in the region" (p. 337) through the influx of "illegal immigration" into western Myanmar needs to be taken account of in order to address one of the most heated identity issues in Myanmar's...

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