http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
Hamilton-Hart, Natasha The Institute for Far Eastern Studies, Kyungnam Un 1999 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.23 No.4
Thailand has been open to global political and economic forces for more than a century. This article investigates the implications of such openness for domestic politics and policy. It argues that while Thailand has often been responsive to external forces, globalization has not generated a predictable set of pressures. In the 19th century and in the wake of Thailand's currency crisis of 1997, the demands of integration in the world economy prompted attempts at rationalizing and strengthening state structures, as well as curtailing some types of government policy. In the decade prior to 1997, in contrast, Thai policymakers and commentators interpreted globalization as a force impelling more consistently deregulatory policies, particularly in the financial sector. This policy shift, was a critical factor behind Thailand's financial crisis. Each episode suggests that the role played by structural economic forces in bringing bout change was minor. Capital mobility can raise the costs of some policies, particularly attempts at an independent monetary policy, but the direction of policy change is determined less by such objective constraints than by the preferences and agency of policical actors.
HAMILTON ROBERT CHRISTOPHER 대구대학교 다문화사회정책연구소 2016 현대사회와 다문화 Vol.6 No.1
Sexualizing space and place requires negotiating the substance, production, and constitution of the framework within which the sexual self is created, refracted, and re-interpreted. Though some have limited the boundaries of this framework to gender as internalized from within, this paper argues that only through social interactionism and performativity can sexual behavior be understood and negotiated. Using multiple semi-controlled interviews with both a male and female entrepreneur of sex-related businesses, as well as from observational data, this research further investigates the social through the performative geographies created by space and place. At the macro-level, this research analyzes the influences of capitalist and cultural forces in destabilizing geographies of gender and sexuality on place, while from a micro-sociological level it investigates how the consequent newly created space(s) mitigate, manipulate, and even dictate the consolidation of the sexual self, and either rupture or catalyze a return to traditional notions of gender-based heteronormativity even within queer society.