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%T Biopolitics in rebel-controlled Myanmar: exploring why the United League of Arakan supports the Kyaukphyu Special Economic Zone
%A Chu, Ta-Wei
%A Jonathan, Saw
%A Lynn, Kyaw
%J Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs
%N 3
%P 472-499
%V 43
%D 2024
%K Belt and Road Initiative; Bestimmungsfaktoren; Freie Wirtschaftszone; Guerillaverbände; Wirtschaftliche Sonderzone; Zusammenarbeit
%@ 1868-4882
%~ GIGA
%U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/18681034241256369
%X In this article, we explore why the Myanmar-based insurgency organisation known as the United League of Arakan (ULA) supports the Kyaukphyu Special Economic Zone (KSEZ): a controversial Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) project. We argue that the ULA's support for the KSEZ is rooted in a biopolitics that benefits the ULA by attractively showcasing its insurgent aims and by effectively boosting its local authority. The ULA's pro-KSEZ policy partially explains why the KSEZ, unlike other BRI projects in junta-led Myanmar, has enjoyed moderate success. Despite its biopolitical benefits, the ULA's pro-KSEZ policy has marginalised certain anti-KSEZ actors in the rebel organisation's sphere of control. The resulting fragmentation may both destabilise the ULA's hard-fought social order and undermine the prospects of the KSEZ. Our examination of the ULA-KSEZ relationship empirically contributes to BRI-in-Myanmar research, which has heretofore paid little attention to rebel-controlled societies' significant influence on foreign-led domestic development projects.
%C GBR
%G en
%9 Zeitschriftenartikel
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info