Academic literature on the topic 'Villages, thailand'

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Journal articles on the topic "Villages, thailand"

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Jacobs, BB. "Endemic Goitre in Highland Villages in Northern Thailand." Asia Pacific Journal of Public Health 2, no. 2 (April 1988): 127–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/101053958800200208.

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Prevalence of goitre was recorded in seven hill tribe villages in Mae Hong Son Province in Northern Thailand. The prevalence rate ranged from 26% to 75% with 47% of the 874 people in the sample having goitre. The prevalence and size of goitre increased with age; a 75% rate was observed in individuals under the age of 40 years. There was no association of prevalence with altitude of residence or with ethnicity. However, socio-economic level was a possible source of variation in prevalence between ethnic groups within the most accessible and best developed village (Sob Pong). No cretins were observed in these villages nor in any of the 26 nearby villages with endemic goitre. There was no evidence that cretins were hidden or subjected to passive Infanticide. In the villages that had any measures to combat iodine deficiency, the measures were inadequate and reflected a lack of knowledge in both the providers and recipients of health care. A successful programme to eradicate iodine deficiency and its accompanying diseases will require careful planning, monitoring and evaluation with the individuality of each village taken into account.
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Chaimano, Kanita. "Tonal Variation in the Lue Dialects of Thailand." MANUSYA 12, no. 3 (2009): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/26659077-01203001.

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This study analyzes the tonal variation of Lue dialects spoken in Thailand. These dialects are classified into groups based on structural differences in their tonal systems, and this classification then forms the basis for a linguistic map of Thailand’s Lue dialects. The data were collected from 45 villages in 7 provinces in the northern part of Thailand. Three informants were selected to represent each village, for a total of 135 informants participating in this research. William J.Gedney’s (1972) wordlist was used to elicit tonal data. The tonal features of the dialects were analyzed using auditory information and the personal computer programs “PRAAT, ver.4.5.12” and Microsoft Excel.
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Rigg, Jonathan, Suriya Veeravongs, Lalida Veeravongs, and Piyawadee Rohitarachoon. "Reconfiguring rural spaces and remaking rural lives in central Thailand." Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 39, no. 3 (September 11, 2008): 355–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022463408000350.

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AbstractDrawing on fieldwork in the central plains of Thailand, the paper traces the transformation of the study villages from agricultural communities, to divided and often fractious dormitory settlements. Agriculture has been largely squeezed out of the local economy and local livelihoods by a raft of economic, environmental and social changes. At the same time, the rural spaces of Thailand have been infiltrated by a range of non-agricultural activities – in this instance, reflected in the arrival of an industrial park – and villagers as well as migrant sojourners from other parts of Thailand have taken up these new opportunities in the non-farm economy. The net result of these processes of agrarian transformation has been that the village, as a community, a unit of production, a site of identity, and a place with a common history, is evaporating.
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Saowakontha, S., V. Pipitgool, S. Pariyanonda, S. Tesana, K. Rojsathaporn, and C. Intarakhao. "Field trials in the control of Opisthorchis viverrini with an integrated programme in endemic areas of northeast Thailand." Parasitology 106, no. 3 (April 1993): 283–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0031182000075107.

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SUMMARYA control programme of opisthorchiasis was carried out for three years in three villages of northeast Thailand in order to compare the effectiveness of two intervention measures. The intervention measures employed were to give praziquantel treatment to all infected people either once (village I) or twice (village II) per year with the integration of regular health education and sanitation improvement. A control village (village III) received no intervention during the study. Sampling of the population in these villages to estimate prevalence, intensity, reinfection and incidence of infection as well as knowledge of opisthorchiasis and number of latrines was performed at 6 monthly intervals throughout the duration of the study. At the initial assessment, there were no significant differences in the prevalence and intensity of infection of villages I and II. Both values were greatly reduced when assessed 6 months after the initiation of treatment, and the decrease in prevalence and intensity of infection did not differ between villages I and II. The control village (village III), during the first 2 years, exhibited slight variation in the prevalence and intensity, and these decreased considerably in the third year of the study. The reinfection rate per 6 months in villages I and II was nearly equal. The incidence rate per 6 months in the two treated villages was lower than that of the control village. Marked improvement in knowledge of opisthorchiasis, behavioural changes of eating raw fish and increased numbers of latrines was evident in all of the villages during this study. The study showed that the effectiveness of annual drug treatment is similar to that of 6 monthly treatments when combined with regular health education and sanitation improvement.
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Huynh, Thien Duc. "The policies on developing traditional craft villages in some Asian countries and lessons for Vietnam." Science and Technology Development Journal 18, no. 2 (June 30, 2015): 119–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.32508/stdj.v18i2.1198.

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The paper researches the policies of developing traditional craft villages in some Asian countries, especially Japan and China. Recently, Japan and China have been the two nations which have successfully adopted the policies on developing traditional craft villages. Taking Japan as an example, the policy named “each craft village a career” has been very successfully used and then, it spread to Thailand and other countries in Southest Asia. For China, the government’s policies focused on exports and demand stimulus. From the research, we will earn some experimental lessons to develop craft villages in Viet Nam, particularly the combination of the government’s aid policies and the potential of the craft villages.
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RENDE TAYLOR, LISA. "PATTERNS OF CHILD FOSTERAGE IN RURAL NORTHERN THAILAND." Journal of Biosocial Science 37, no. 3 (June 18, 2004): 333–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021932004006790.

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Evolutionary theory guides an investigation of foster parent selection in two northern Thai villages with different biosocial environments: one village has high levels of labour migration and divorce, and growing numbers of parental death due to HIV/AIDS, while the other village has lower migration, divorce and parental mortality levels. Focus groups examine mothers’ and fathers’ motivations and ideals regarding foster caretaker selection, and quantitative family surveys examine real fostering outcomes: specifically, the laterality (matrilateral versus patrilateral) and genetic distance of the foster caretakers of all ever-fostered children in these two villages. As predicted, in environments of high marital stability and paternity certainty, parents seem to prefer close genetic kin from either side as foster parents for their children. In low marital stability and paternity certainty environments, parents trust their own lateral kin, regardless of genetic distance, over close genetic kin from the other side. The striking exception to this pattern, however, occurs in the case of parental death, in which case children are fostered to the deceased parent’s kin, regardless of the child’s sex or other factors. In general, the foster parents for girls are selected with more care, reflecting the daughter/female preference expected in traditionally matrilineal, matrilocal societies. An ordered decision-making pathway for foster parent selection is proposed, taking into consideration the key factors of (a) the circumstances driving the fostering decision, (b) the gender of the child, (c) the gender of the key decision-making parent, and (d) the degree of marital and population fluidity (and subsequent paternity certainty) in the village.
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Mungmonphoncharoen, Som, Tawatchai Apidechkul, and Pannipha Dokmaingam. "Factors associated with the recurrence of dengue fever in villages in Chiang Rai, Thailand." Journal of Health Research 33, no. 6 (November 11, 2019): 438–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jhr-11-2018-0140.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to determine the factors associated with DF occurrence in recurrence villages in Chiang Rai, Thailand. Design/methodology/approach A case-control study was conducted between June 2017 and December 2017. A validated questionnaire was used to detect the factors associated with recurrence of DF. χ2 and logistic regression were used to detect the associations between variables at α=0.05. Findings In total, 213 cases and 436 controls were recruited into the analysis. Cases were recruited from 20 DF recurring villages, while controls were recruited from 20 non-DF recurring villages in Chiang Rai province. At community level, three variables were associated with recurrence of DF; size of the village (p=0.007), number of villagers (p=0.009), tribe (p=0.043) and distance to a hospital (p=0.003). Three variables were associated with DF at personal and family levels in multivariate model: children whose parents worked as daily employees, and government officers and traders were more likely to have DF 1.56 (95%CI=1.22–2.48) and 4.31 (95%CI=4.66–9.38) times greater than of those whose parents’ worked as agriculturists, respectively; children aged less than one year were 2.89 (95%CI=2.17–4.33) times more likely to have DF than those aged=6 and children who were under standard growth and over standard growth were more likely to have DF than those standard growth 1.61 (95%CI=1.18–2.53) and 7.33 (95%CI=4.39–10.37) times, respectively. Originality/value This is the original research article which was conducted in detecting the factors associated with recurrence of DHF in Northern Thailand.
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Cheewinsiriwat, Pannee. "GIS Application for the Maps of Tourist Attractions and Ethnic Groups of Nan Province, Thailand." MANUSYA 12, no. 2 (2009): 19–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/26659077-01202002.

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This paper describes a GIS-based application to illustrate the maps of tourist attractions and ethnic groups of Nan Province in Thailand under a research project funded by the Thailand Research Fund (TRF). Various distribution patterns of languages and settlements of ethnic groups within Nan are mapped according to the collected village data. A questionnaire was designed to collect information from 902 villages. The questionnaire included questions about village background and environment, interesting cultural elements, village names, village history, local tourist places and schools, population, ethnic groups and languages. Nine-hundred questionnaires were distributed by well-trained staff from the Nan Community who conducted interviews of two or three senior people from each village. The data from the questionnaires was then entered into the village database via a developed user interface. In the meantime, a GIS database had been set up by combining map layers from several sources. The map layer set consists of administrative boundaries, roads, rivers, contour lines, as well as associated locations of the villages. The information of each village in the village database was then linked to its location represented by points in the GIS database. With the customized GIS application, various types of interactive queries about village data, as well as tourist attractions or ethnolinguistic maps, can be accommodated. Logical block diagrams, user interfaces and results are detailed in this paper.
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Krassanairawiwong, Tares, Chartchay Suvannit, Krit Pongpirul, and Kriang Tungsanga. "Roles of subdistrict health office personnel and village health volunteers in Thailand during the COVID-19 pandemic." BMJ Case Reports 14, no. 9 (September 2021): e244765. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2021-244765.

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In Thailand, 40 000 subdistrict health centre (SDHC) personnel and >1 million village health volunteers (VHVs) are responsible for primary healthcare of 23 million households in 75 032 villages. They were trained, made household visits, gave hygiene advice, participated in the ‘Big Cleaning Day’ campaign, produced cloth face masks, proactively identified high-risk visitors and monitored quarantined cases. 7.4 million Thais received basic education on hygiene, 1.3 million villagers joined the campaign and 3.6 million handmade cloth face masks were produced. In March 2020, 3.9 million households were visited, and 40 000 high-risk cases were detected. The intensity of proactive case findings increased to 12.6 million home visits and 834 000 cases were detected in April 2020. Almost 800 000 cases complied with the 14-day mandatory home quarantine, of which 3.6% developed symptoms suspected of respiratory tract infection. VHVs and SDHC personnel could efficiently contribute to the prevention and control of COVID-19 in Thailand.
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Chang, Stephanie E., Beverley J. Adams, Jacqueline Alder, Philip R. Berke, Ratana Chuenpagdee, Shubharoop Ghosh, and Colette Wabnitz. "Coastal Ecosystems and Tsunami Protection after the December 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami." Earthquake Spectra 22, no. 3_suppl (June 2006): 863–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1193/1.2201971.

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An exploratory study was conducted on the role of coastal ecosystems in protecting communities from the December 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, focusing on mangrove forests on the Andaman coast of Thailand and how well villages were undertaking environmental conservation. Remote sensing analysis identified predisaster mangrove change and postdisaster structural damage and landscape changes. Field data from five sites (20 villages), gathered via the VIEWS™ data collection system, validated and supplemented this analysis. Key informants at several of these villages were also interviewed. A preliminary comparison of villages that otherwise faced similar tsunami exposure suggests that the presence of healthy mangroves did afford substantial protection. Village performance in mangrove conservation and management efforts, and thus the presence of healthy forests, is influenced by both social capital and the design of external aid delivery programs.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Villages, thailand"

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Wongchachom, Chumnong. "An investigation into a community information database system in the northeast of Thailand community empowerment through community learning centres /." Connect to thesis, 2006. http://portal.ecu.edu.au/adt-public/adt-ECU2006.0018.html.

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Hirai, Kyonosuke. "Women, family and factory work in Northern Thailand : an anthropological study of a Japanese factory and its workers villages." Thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London), 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.265810.

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This thesis discusses how rural young women cope with the modern capitalist system and how their industrial experiences affect their family life, based on participant observation both in a Japanese-owned assembly factory and in its workers' villages, in Lamphun, Northern Thailand. The thesis is divided into three parts: the first deals with the traditional notions of work and femininity, the second with factory interactions, and the third with the influence of factory employment on family life. The first part examines the connotations and interactions of iigai:, meaning work and rites, and the gender and family ideology that control young women's labour and sexuality. The second part of the thesis looks at the experience of young women in the factory, and we see how each of the village women, utilising both her ready-made values and new values relating to factory employment, is struggling for power and honour in factory interactions. The analysis of the hierarchical relations in the factory pays particular attention to how Thai workers' practices, which Japanese managers neglect as personal affairs, structure, reshape and control labour relations and the production process. Moreover, in analysing cultural practices not directly relating to work, romantic stories, spirit mcdiumship and catalogue consumption, we sec how desires for modernity and autonomous self-images are produced in factory interactions. Moving back to the village again, the final part shows how factory women's selfimage and ideal life, constructed in factory interactions, affect their family relationships, courtship, housesvork and home consumption. In the conclusion I argue that the factory provides the women with an opportunity for enjoying cultural imagining relating to female sexuality and gender, which on the one hand largely affect the operation of the factory system, and on the other arc linked with their cultural transformation at home.
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Rigg, Jonathan. "The problems of agricultural intensification in a marginal rainfed environment : a study of farmers' practices and government policies in two villages in northeastern Thailand." Thesis, SOAS, University of London, 1985. http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/29192/.

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In short, the study proposes that farming in a marginal rain-fed environment such as that of the Northeast Region of Thailand presents special problems for the intensification of production, and that government policies should take account of these problems. The thesis is based on fieldwork conducted in two villages in the province of Mahasarakham, Northeastern Thailand, during the period September 1982 to June 1983. The villages were both farming communities in which households grew rain-fed wet-rice to meet their subsistence requirements/ and upland cash crops (principally cassava) to supplement their income. A detailed questionnaire was conducted among approximately a fifth of the population. The work involves an analysis of farmers' practices vis a vis rice and upland cropping and contrasts them with the government recommendations. There were significant disparities between the two and these have been explained from the perspective of the farmer, rather than that of the extension office. The outcome is that many government initiatives are shown to be less than relevant to the position in which the farmer finds himself. This fact - that the government recommendations are often irrelevant to the inhabitants - is then expanded upon to reveal some of the problems of intensifying agricultural production in a marginal environment where the risks are great. The strategy that the farmers adopted appeared to consist of two contrasting, although not contradictory, elements: firstly, a great specificity of response to varying edaphic and topographic conditions; and secondly, an emphasis on flexibility of response to the variable climate. Both elements combine to stabilise production or minimise risk. The resulting limited opportunities for investment in agriculture forced farmers to look for a large proportion of their cash income outside rice and upland crop cultivation. This was accentuated by the ever-increasing pressure on farmers to have a greater disposable income, and emphasises the importance of diversifying the farm economy and presenting farmers with opportunities outside agriculture.
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Binet, Isabelle. "« Tissus et vêtements Karen (Pwa Ka Nyaw) » : du tissage aux usages, continuités et transformations dans deux villages du nord de la Thaïlande." Thesis, Strasbourg, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019STRAG029/document.

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L’histoire de la Thaïlande, et sa politique d’intégration des «Montagnards», expliquent la spécificité de la situation des Karen sur le territoire national. Ces derniers ne forment pas un groupe homogène, comme le montre mon ethnographie. A partir, et par la comparaison de deux villages sgaw karen, j’appréhende le vêtement karen et la structure des garde-robes comme révélateurs de «l’identité» de ces populations qui se revendiquent à la fois Karen et Thaïlandaises. Ce qui fait le vêtement karen, les règles internes à la culture karen et les influences extérieures, se dégagent de l’analyse technologique et de la typologie qui en découle. Le processus de constitution des garde-robes, au quotidien et en contexte cérémoniel, mettent en exergue la place centrale de la femme. Le prisme du vêtement nous révèle une société attachée à la continuité des générations et intégrée dans la société thaïlandaise dont elle adopte, en partie, les codes
The history of Thailand and its integration policy for the «people of the Mountains» account for the specific situation of the Karen on the national territory. As my ethnologic study shows, these people do not constitute a homogeneous group. Taking as a starting point the comparison between two sgaw villages, I consider the Karen garment and the structure of the wardrobes as revealing the identity of these people who claim to be both Karen and Thai. The technological analysis and the ensuing typology outline what characterizes the Karen garment, the internal rules within the Karen culture and the external influences. The process of the development of the wardrobes, in daily use and in ceremonies, highlights the central position of women. Through the prism of the garment, is revealed a society attached to the succession of generations and integrated into the Thai society whose codes it partly adopts
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Ruppert-Mann, Gesine. "Villagers in northeast Thailand and AIDS /." Title page, table of contents and summary only, 1994. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09MPM/09mpmr946.pdf.

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Promthep, Adisorn. "Prediction of success in village fish farming in northeast Thailand." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp04/nq21383.pdf.

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Chanrungmaneekul, Unaloam. "The globalised village : grounded experience, media and response in Eastern Thailand." Thesis, Loughborough University, 2009. https://dspace.lboro.ac.uk/2134/13392.

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Drawing on the fieldwork in a village community in Eastern Thailand, Ban Noen PutsaPluak Ked, this thesis explores the complex relationships between processes of globaIisation, representations in the mainstream media and activist media; and villagers' responses to change. The research, summarised here has three interrelated objectives: First, to examine how globalisation and industrialisation are represented in the mainstream and activist media. Second, to investigate the role played by the activist media in promoting counter visions of possible futures. Thirdly, to investigate the practices and ideas that local people have developed to resist or accept globalisation. The research employs a multi-method approach combining ethnographic methods, a questionnaire survey; textual analysis; and focus groups. The findings point to a complex relationship between mediated representations and visions of modernity. They also demonstrate that villagers' responses are strongly stratified by age, length of residence, and relation to the pivot of the new industriaIisation- a major chemical plant and that they remain strongly influenced by the crucial nexus of traditional Thai society, the patron client system. Additionally, content analysis and critical discourse analysis suggest that Thai news television programmes reproduced both the ideology of globalism and the celebration of consumerism. Moreover, the voices of marginalized groups and local people are also absent from the activist media.
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Forsyth, Timothy Julian. "Environmental degradation and tourism in a Yao village of northern Thailand." Thesis, SOAS, University of London, 1992. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.285700.

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Kobori, Eiko. "Prevalence and correlates of sexual behaviors among Karen villagers in northern Thailand." 京都大学 (Kyoto University), 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/2433/137052.

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Harris, Jalisa. "Public Perceptions of Drinking Water in Rural Thailand: Surveying Households in Ban Thakhonyang, Ban Don Man and Ban Nong Khon, in Kae Dam District in Mahasarakham Province." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2017. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1491307517949412.

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Books on the topic "Villages, thailand"

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ʻĒkkachai, Santisudā. Behind the smile: Voices of Thailand. Bangkok, Thailand: Thai Development Support Committee, 1990.

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The commercialized crafts of Thailand: Hill tribes and lowland villages : collected articles. Richmond, Surrey: Curzon Press, 2000.

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Fukui, Hayao. Food and population in a Northeast Thai village. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1993.

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Kingshill, Konrad. Ku Dæng -- thirty years later: A village study in Northern Thailand, 1954-1984. [Dekalb, IL]: Northern Illinois University, Center for Southeast Asian Studies, 1991.

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Čhirananthanāphō̜n, Suphattrā. Phūminām khō̜ng mūbān nai khēt Phāk Nư̄a tō̜n Lāng [chư̄ čhangwat]: Rāingān kānwičhai = Toponyms (village names) in the lower Northern part of Thailand [name of province]. [Phitsanulok]: Sākhā Wichā Phāsāsāt, Khana Manutsayasāt, Mahāwitthayālai Narēsūan, 2004.

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Satō, Yasuyuki. The Thai-Khmer village: Community, family, ritual, and civil society in Northeast Thailand. Niigata: Graduate School of Modern Society and Culture, Niigata University, 2005.

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Thailand. Krom Kānsưksā nō̜k Rōngrīan. The answers are in the villages: An extensive series of anecdotes and case studies of what really happened (and didn't happen) and why in HAE villages. Bangkok: Dept. of Nonformal Education, Hill Areas Education (HAE) Project, 1986.

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Wolz, Axel. Rural employment under a closing land frontier: The case of settled villages in Phitsanulok Province, Thailand. Saarbrücken: Verlag Breitenbach, 1987.

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Wolz, Axel. Rural employment under a closing land frontier: The case of selected villages in Phitsanulok Province, Thailand. Saarbrücken: Breitenbach, 1987.

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Village-based silk production in transition, Northeastern Thailand. Bangkok, Thailand: White Lotus Press, 2012.

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Book chapters on the topic "Villages, thailand"

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Boonkird, S. A., E. C. M. Fernandes, and P. K. R. Nair. "Forest villages: an agroforestry approach to rehabilitating forest land degraded by shifting cultivation in Thailand." In Agroforestry Systems in the Tropics, 211–27. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-2565-6_14.

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Simaraks, Suchint, Terdsak Khammaeng, Suthipong Uriyapongson, and John Connell. "13. Farmer-to-farmer workshops on smallholder dairy cow raising in three villages in Northeast Thailand; Farmers experiment with a new crop." In Joining Farmers’ Experiments, 207–20. Rugby, Warwickshire, United Kingdom: Practical Action Publishing, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.3362/9781780442587.013.

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Malikhao, Patchanee, and Jan Servaes. "A Village in the Jungle: Culture and Communication in Thailand." In Culture and Communication in Thailand, 49–69. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-4125-9_4.

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Shimizu, Ikuro. "Thailand: The Houses of a Khun Village in Chiang Mai." In Sustainable Houses and Living in the Hot-Humid Climates of Asia, 77–88. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-8465-2_8.

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Sitthikriengkrai, Malee, and Nathan Porath. "Environmental Illness at Klity Creek (Thailand): A Karen Village’s Quest for Justice." In Shifting Perspectives in Tribal Studies, 149–65. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-8090-7_8.

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Nishii, Ryoko. "A Corpse Necessitates Disentangled Relationships: Boundary Transgression and Boundary-Making in a Buddhist-Muslim Village in Southern Thailand." In Buddhist-Muslim Relations in a Theravada World, 169–95. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-32-9884-2_6.

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Attavanich, Monsinee, Andreas Neef, Hirohide Kobayashi, and Terdsak Tachakitkachorn. "Change of Livelihoods and Living Conditions After the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami: The Case of the Post-Disaster Rehabilitation of the Moklen Community in Tungwa Village, Southern Thailand." In Recovery from the Indian Ocean Tsunami, 471–86. Tokyo: Springer Japan, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-55117-1_30.

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"Developmental democracy: villages, insurgency and security." In Democracy and National Identity in Thailand, 68–99. Routledge, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203361634-7.

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Karen, Ruth. "Charoen Pokphand: Pig Raising in Four Experimental Villages in Thailand." In Agribusiness and the Small-Scale Farmer A Dynamic Partnership for Development, 111–24. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429035814-7.

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Phimphisut, Tipaporn. "Choice of Community Forestry by Voice of Local Participation in Northeastern Villages of Thailand." In Governance Innovations in the Asia-Pacific Region, 257–66. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429453977-16.

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Conference papers on the topic "Villages, thailand"

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"Adoption of Kampung Majapahit Innovation by Bejijong Village Society and Sentonorejo Village in Trowulan." In Dec. 25-26, 2017 Bangkok (Thailand). URST, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.17758/urst.iah1217417.

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Suephakdee, D. N. "The conservation of nine units market village, Bangplama district, Supanburi province, Thailand." In SUSTAINABLE TOURISM 2010. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/st100331.

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Tayeh, Brohanah, Kamila Kaping, Nadeehah Samae, and Varavejbhisis Yossiri. "The Maintenance of Language and Identities of the Thai-Melayu Ethnic Group in Jaleh Village, Yarang District, Pattani, Thailand." In GLOCAL Conference on Asian Linguistic Anthropology 2020. The GLOCAL Unit, SOAS University of London, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47298/cala2020.4-1.

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Abstract:
At the Thai-Malaysian border, a majority of the population comprises the Thai-Melayu ethnic group, as speakers of the Pattani-Malay dialect. Here, heritage language maintenance presents a salient factor. The ethnicity resides on both sides of the border. This study aims to investigate the heritage language maintenance and identities of the Thai-Melayu ethnic group in Jaleh Village, Yarang District, Pattani, Thailand, and to examine their attitudes towards the language used in their community. The samples-set comprised 20 local respondents who were born and raised in the village. A questionnaire addressing the effects of the heritage language maintenance of the Thai-Melayu was employed as a tool of data collection. A descriptive analysis method was used for data analysis. The results of the study revealed ideological underpinnings of the ethnic group with regards to language, as well as demographic information that informs population and cultural studies. These factors include that the Pattani-Malay dialect constitutes a major language, where the Thai language in comparison has a minor usage in the community. The Pattani-Malay dialect is used in the family domain, with extended families, or with neighbors, and in ritualistic or religion domains. In contrast, Thai is used with strangers, in government and official domains, in the school domain, and in the domain of public health. Moreover, the results support that the dialect has not as yet become endangered, evidenced by that the samples prefer the Pattani-Malay dialect as the main language for daily life, and for passing on their ethnic language to younger generations, a process labeled as ‘accidental maintenance.’
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Kasirawat, Tirapong, Patompong Boonsiri, and Titti Saksornchai. "PEA microgrid design for coexistence with local community and environment: Case study at Khun pae village Thailand." In 2017 IEEE Innovative Smart Grid Technologies - Asia (ISGT-Asia). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/isgt-asia.2017.8378343.

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Pookaiyaudom, G. "Relationship between community pride and participation needs in sustainable tourism development of Fishing Village: a case study of Samut Sakhon Province, Thailand." In ECOSUD 2015. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/eco150311.

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Theingthae, S. "Sustainable ecotourism development in the Muslim community after the impact of the tsunami disaster in 2004: a case study in Bang Rong Village, Phuket Province, Thailand." In SUSTAINABLE TOURISM 2016. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/st160031.

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