Table of Contents for Civil Society and Political Change in Asia
Table of Contents for
Civil Society and Political Change in Asia
Preface
Acronyms and Abbreviations
Contributors
Introduction, by Muthiah Alagappa
Part I. Conceptual Perspective
1.Civil Society and Political Change: An Analytical Framework, by Muthiah Alagappa
Part II. Legitimate Civil Society: Negotiating Democratic Space
2.Indonesia: Transformation of Civil Society and Democratic Breakthrough, by Edward Aspinall
3.The Philippines: Fractious Civil Society and Competing Visions of Democracy, by Jennifer C. Franco
4.South Korea: Confrontational Legacy and Democratic Contributions, by Sunhyuk Kim
5.Taiwan: No Civil Society, No Democracy, by Yun Fan
6.India: Expanding and Contracting Democratic Space, by Amitabh Behar and Aseem Prakash
7.Japan: Social Capital Without Advocacy, by Robert Pekkanen
Part III. Controlled and Communalized Civil Society: Challenging and Reinforcing the State
8.Malaysia: Construction of Counterhegemonic Narratives and Agendas, by Meredith L. Weiss
9.Sri Lanka: Ethnic Domination, Violence, and Illiberal Democracy, by Neil DeVotta
10.Singapore: Engagement and Autonomy Within the Political Status Quo, by Suzaina Kadir
Part IV. Repressed Civil Society; Penetrated, Co-opted, and Avoiding the State
11.Pakistan: Civil Society in the Service of an Authoritarian State, by Aqil Shah
12.Burma: Civil Society Skirting Regime Rules, by Kyaw Yin Hlaing
13.China: The Limits of Civil Society in a Late Leninist State, by Mary E. Gallagher
Part V. Conclusion
14.The Nonstate Public Sphere in Asia: Dynamic Growth, Institutionalization Lag, by Muthiah Alagappa
15.Civil Society and Democratic Change: Indeterminate Connection, Transforming Relations, by Muthiah Alagappa
Index