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From Confrontation to Mediation: Cambodian Farmers Expelled by a Vietnamese Company

[journal article]

Bourdier, Frédéric

Abstract

Concessions granted to investors in Cambodia have generated a deep sense of insecurity in rural forested areas. Villagers are not confined to a passive “everyday resistance of the poor,” as mentioned by James Scott, insofar as they frequently engage in frontal strategies for recovering land. Such ha... view more

Concessions granted to investors in Cambodia have generated a deep sense of insecurity in rural forested areas. Villagers are not confined to a passive “everyday resistance of the poor,” as mentioned by James Scott, insofar as they frequently engage in frontal strategies for recovering land. Such has been the case in the northeastern provinces, where indigenous livelihoods are recurrently threatened by foreign and national companies. But what happens when a land conflict ends up in a stakeholder dialogue? The article intends to follow such a story that occurred for the first time in Ratanakiri, in a vast territory inhabited by several ethnic groups. After gruelling hostilities with the encroacher, dispossessed farmers finally accepted, encouraged by international/national NGOs, to comply with existing mechanisms associated with international law regulations and World Bank procedures. It ends up in an institutionalised mediation, technical and apolitical, which turned to the disadvantage of the people, with evident power imbalance. Our analysis, while portraying the trajectories of national/international actors involved in the mediation process, reveals the effects on this mediation on local sociopolitical organisations.... view less

Keywords
expropriation; social movement; resistance; foreign investment; mediation; agriculture; conflict; farmer; land; Cambodia; Southeast Asia; indigenous peoples

Classification
Ethnology, Cultural Anthropology, Ethnosociology

Free Keywords
land conflict; local sociopolitical organisation

Document language
English

Publication Year
2019

Page/Pages
p. 55-76

Journal
Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs, 38 (2019) 1

Issue topic
Social movements in Cambodia

ISSN
1868-4882

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.