Southeast Asian politics
Susan Blackburn
12 points
* 3 hours per week
* First semester
* Clayton
Objectives As a result of studying this subject, students should be able to: understand and explain different strategies of development adopted by Southeast Asian governments and their implementation; analyse the political forces supporting and opposing those policies; evaluate the effects of those policies on different groups in the three countries; research and write critically analytical and documented essays.
Synopsis Because development is the main preoccupation of Southeast Asian governments, this subject aims to assess the strategies for development adopted in three such countries, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam. After reviewing the social and economic problems facing those countries at independence, the subject looks briefly at the development options available and then proceeds to examine the development policies of successive governments from the point of view of identifying the groups which benefit and lose as a result of these policies. Finally, some issues of political economy affecting the region as a whole will be discussed, including environmental controversies, democratisation and women and development.
Assessment Written (6000 words): 50%
* Examination (3 hours): 50%
Recommended texts
Hewison K and others (eds) Southeast Asia in the 1990s Allen and Unwin, 1993
Porter G Vietnam: The politics of bureaucratic socialism Cornell U P, 1993
Schwarz A A national in waiting: Indonesia in the 1990s Allen and Unwin, 1994
Means G P Malaysian politics: The second generation OUP, 1991
Published by Monash University, Clayton, Victoria
3168 Copyright © Monash University 1996 - All Rights Reserved - Caution Authorised by the Academic Registrar December 1996 |