In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

171 Bibliography A NOTE ON CITATIONS FOR ARCHIVAL SOURCES Bibliographic information for archival sources is given in the endnotes (with the exception of one type of British National Archives Foreign Office document, noted below). Following are explanations for the abbreviations and numbers used in those citations. British National Archives (formerly Public Record Office), Kew: “National Archives (UK)” followed by department code, series number, file number, document description. Department codes: CO (Colonial Office), FO (Foreign Office), PRO (Domestic Records of the Public Records Office, Gifts, Deposits, Notes, and Transcripts). Bibliographic entries below that are listed under“Foreign Office”are for documents in Further correspondence respecting the affairs of Siam, a printed annual collection of Foreign Office documents from the previous year, for internal use. The collection is held by the British National Archives in the series FO 422. Thailand’s Council of State:“Kritsadika”followed by file number, year (using the Buddhist calendar), document description. Thai NationalArchives in Bangkok:“National Archives”followed by record group number , file number, document description. The record group number includes the following ministerial codes: K (Kaset, Agriculture), Kh (Khlang, Finance), M (Mahatthai, Interior), O (Murathathon, Privy Seal), SR (Samnak nayokrattamontri, Office of the Prime Minister), T (Tang prathet, Foreign Affairs). Documents that can be accessed on microfilm are grouped by reign and ministry.For example,R5 K refers to the reign of RamaV (Chulalongkorn) and the Ministry of Agriculture (Kaset). Documents in hard copy are grouped primarily along ministerial lines, without reference to the reign in which they were produced. “4,000 accusing ‘landlord king.’” 1954. Bangkok Post, 18 May. Abdelal, Rawi. 2001. National purpose in the world economy: Post-Soviet states in comparative perspective. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. Abinales, Patricio N. 2000. “Filipino communism and the spectre of the Communist Manifesto.” Kasarinlan: Philippine Journal of Third World Studies 15 (1): 147–74. Acemoglu, Daron. 2003. “Root causes: A historical approach to assessing the role of institutions in economic development.” Finance and Development 40 (2): 27–30. Acemoglu, Daron, Simon Johnson, and James A. Robinson. 2001. “The colonial origins of comparative development: An empirical investigation.” American Economic Review 91 (5): 1369–1401. ——. 2003. “An African success story: Botswana.” In In search of prosperity: Analytic narratives on economic growth, edited by D. Rodrik. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Acemoglu, Daron, and James A. Robinson. 2000. “Why did the West extend the franchise ? Democracy, inequality, and growth in historical perspective.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 115 (4): 1167–99. ——. 2002. “The political economy of the Kuznets curve.” Review of Development Economics 6 (2): 183–203. 172 BIBLIOGRAPHY ——. 2006. “Economic backwardness in political perspective.” American Political Science Review 100 (1): 115–31. Adas, Michael. 1974. The Burma delta: Economic development and social change on an Asian rice frontier, 1852–1941. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. ——. 1981. “From avoidance to confrontation: Peasant protest in precolonial and colonial Southeast Asia.” Comparative Studies in Society and History 23 (2): 217–47. Agricultural Land Reform Office. 2008. Raingan pracham pi 2551 [Annual report 2008]. Bangkok: Agricultural Land Reform Office. Aguilar, Filomeno V. 1994. “Beyond inevitability: The opening of Philippine provincial ports in 1855.” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 25 (1): 70–90. ——. 1998. Clash of spirits: The history of power and sugar planter hegemony on a Visayan island. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. Akin Rabibhadana. 1996. The organization of Thai society in the early Bangkok period, 1782–1873. Bangkok: Wisdom of The Land Foundation & Thai Association of Qualitative Researchers. Alagappa, Muthiah. 1987. The national security of developing states: Lessons from Thailand . Dover, MA: Auburn House. Aldrich, Richard J. 1993. The key to the South: Britain, the United States, and Thailand during the approach of the Pacific War, 1929–1942. Singapore: Oxford University Press. Alghion, Philippe, and Patrick Bolton. 1997. “A theory of trickle-down growth and development.” Review of Economic Studies 64 (2): 151–72. Amara Pongsapich. 1995. “Nongovernmental organizations in Thailand.” In Emerging civil society in the Asia Pacific community, edited by T. Yamamoto. Singapore: ISEAS. Ammar Siamwalla. 1972. Land, labour and capital in three rice-growing deltas of Southeast Asia, 1800–1940. Discussion paper no. 150, New Haven: Economic Growth Center, Yale University. ——. 1979. Khao nai setthakit thai [Rice in the Thai economy]. Bangkok: Munnithi khrongkan tamra sangkhomsat lae manutsat. Anan Ganjanapan. 1984. “The partial commercialization of rice production in northern Thailand (1900–1981).” Ph.D. diss., Cornell University. ——. 1988. “The differentiation of the peasantry and complex patronage relationship under forced commercialization, 1900–1942.” In Changes in northern Thailand and the Shan States, 1886...

Share