National Assembly Library of Thailand

Territorial governance in Southeast Asia /

Harding, Andrew.

Territorial governance in Southeast Asia / Andrew Harding. - 1st ed. - London : Hart Publishing, 2025. - Online resource

Introduction: A Sense of Place Part I: General Issues 1. The Project 2. Constitution Part II: Case Studies 3. Indonesia 4. Malaysia 5. Myanmar 6. The Philippines 7. Thailand Part III: Special Regional Autonomy 8. Autonomy and the Demand for a Homeland 9. Regional Autonomy I: Aceh and Papua 10. Regional Autonomy II: Bangsamoro Autonomous Region, Muslim Mindanao 11. Regional Autonomy III: Sabah and Sarawak Part IV: Conclusions 12. Territorial Governance, Southeast Asia, and Innovation in Public Law.

This book assesses territorial governance (that is, all forms of subnational governance) as a constitutional artefact in five Southeast Asian countries - Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, and Thailand. Starting with the linked ideas of localism and subsidiarity, the argument is that these states have used various forms of subsidiarity for dealing with ethnic and religious pluralism and the social diversity for which Southeast Asia is especially noted. Territorial governance mechanisms discussed range from decentralisation to special regional autonomy, federalism, and local government, including village autonomy. A silent revolution has occurred in which our view of these states as highly centralised developmental states is in need of serious modification. Southeast Asia, the book argues, presents a high degree of originality in the framing of territorial governance.


Decentralization in government--Law and legislation--Southeast Asia
Regional planning--Law and legislation--Southeast Asia
Regionalism--Southeast Asia
Comparative law
Constitutional & administrative law
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