A Thai Village Headman as a Synaptic Leader

Anthropological data is typically produced in single villages, but consumed by persons interested in peoples, regions, and nations. Although this paper suffers from the disabilities implied by that situation, its goal is to attempt to ameliorate them. The status of headman which I will describe in B...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of Asian studies 1969-05, Vol.28 (3), p.535-549
1. Verfasser: Moerman, Michael
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container_title The Journal of Asian studies
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creator Moerman, Michael
description Anthropological data is typically produced in single villages, but consumed by persons interested in peoples, regions, and nations. Although this paper suffers from the disabilities implied by that situation, its goal is to attempt to ameliorate them. The status of headman which I will describe in Ban Ping is found, named, and assigned the same legal duties in all Thai villages. This should permit other fieldworkers to make straightforward comparisons with their communities.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Alma/SFX Local Collection; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Agricultural land
Bans
Clergy
Communities
Community development
Cultural identity
Disorders
Education
Farming
Field study
Households
Jurisdiction
Leadership
Modernization
Police
Political candidates
Political leadership
Respect
Rice
Rural areas
Towns
Villages
title A Thai Village Headman as a Synaptic Leader
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