Article contents
Current Trends in the Economic History of Southeast Asia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 April 2011
Extract
New winds are blowing in the writing of the economic history of Southeast Asia. The traditional Eurocentric perspective of the colonial economy is gradually giving way to a more Asian perspective stressing similarities and mutual links within the region itself. The issue of Western expansion now appears less vital than long-run economic developments in the Asian economies. Political power struggles in colonial relationships are squeezed aside and replaced by a more quantification and an increasing appreciation of dynamic change that does not readily fit into the model of Westernstyle modernization. The aim of this article is to discuss some positions and directions that have come to the fore in the economic history of Southeast Asia in recent years. Without claiming to offer a full coverage of the field, it is believed that trends thus identified may suggest, at least in part, the future course of Southeast Asian economic history.
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- Information
- Journal of Southeast Asian Studies , Volume 26 , 25th Anniversary Special Issue 1: Perspectives on Southeast Asian Studies , March 1995 , pp. 159 - 168
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- Copyright © The National University of Singapore 1995
References
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5 The sample (60 items) is too small to allow comparisons over time. Moreover such comparisons would by unduly influenced by successive changes in review policies of the Journal of Southeast Asian Studies since the early 1980s such as decisions to enlarge total coverage and to include also books in other languages than English. Because of the time-lag between appearance and review of books, the observations from the sample cannot be exclusively tied to the years 1982–93.
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