Initiateurs et partenaires du projet
Initiateurs
UMI 233 trans VIH MI/ INSERM U 1175
Université Royale des Beaux Arts Phnom Penh
Partenaires
http://sites.sas.upenn.edu/tlc/
Agence Universitaire de la Francophonie - Bureau Asie Pacifique
HSEPP soutient le projet Manusastra !
Bulletin HSEPP Juin & Juillet 2017
HSEPP June and July 2017 Digest
Dear HSEPP Members and Friends,
Here’s our HSEPP June and July 2017 Digest. You are all welcome to share your suggestions, publications and informations with us and to come to present a research paper to the HSEPP conference. Scholars and researchers who wish to give a lecture presenting need to send us a bio data, presentation title and abstract in English and French, as well as a proposed date. For any questions, please feel free to contact us. Lectures can be given in Khmer, French, or English.
Newsletter June&July 2017 (297,41 ko)
· CALL FOR PAPERS
Modes of Authority and Aesthetic Practices from South to Southeast Asia
CFP: The French program Autoritas, a project funded by PSL (Paris Sciences & Lettres University), is focused on the study of the relationship between modes of authority and aesthetic practices from South Asia to Southeast Asia.
The project is conducted jointly by four French research units: The CASE (Center for Southeast Asian Studies), the CEIAS (Center for South Asian Studies), the LAS (Social Anthropology Laboratory) and the GSRL (Societies, Religions & Secularities Group). By opening a dialogue among historians, art historians, epigraphists and archaeologists on the one hand, and anthropologists and ethnomusicologists on the other, the EHESS, the EFEO, the Collège de France and the EPHE pool their resources to bring together research results coming from a multidisciplinary approach aimed at examining the relationship between the aesthetic phenomenon and authority.
The conference Modes of Authority and Aesthetic Practices from South to Southeast Asia intends to think comparatively about the relationship between aesthetic phenomena and authority in a region, South and Southeast Asia, where the aesthetic dimension plays a particularly important role in the legitimation strategies of different types of authority, be they religious, politic or artistic, and where the diversity of societies range from stateless communities to kingdoms and sultanates via various models of states.
This meeting will gather together researchers from several social science fields (history, art history, literature, archaeology, epigraphy, ethnomusicology, ethnochoreology, social anthropology) and several cultural areas, inviting a dialogue between scholars of South and Southeast Asia.
Date : May 23-25, 2018
Venue : Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris
Deadline: Please submit a 300-word abstract and a short biographical note by September 30th 2017.
For more informations and for abstract submission please visit the conference website : https://autoritas.sciencesconf.org/
Call for papers: Modes of Authority and Aesthetic Practices from South to Southeast Asia
The French program Autoritas, a project funded by PSL (Paris Sciences & Lettres University), is focused on the study of the relationship between modes of authority and aesthetic practices from South Asia to Southeast Asia.
The project is conducted jointly by four French research units: The CASE (Center for Southeast Asian Studies), the CEIAS (Center for South Asian Studies), the LAS (Social Anthropology Laboratory) and the GSRL (Societies, Religions & Secularities Group). By opening a dialogue among historians, art historians, epigraphists and archaeologists on the one hand, and anthropologists and ethnomusicologists on the other, the EHESS, the EFEO, the Collège de France and the EPHE pool their resources to bring together research results coming from a multidisciplinary approach aimed at examining the relationship between the aesthetic phenomenon and authority.
The conference Modes of Authority and Aesthetic Practices from South to Southeast Asia intends to think comparatively about the relationship between aesthetic phenomena and authority in a region, South and Southeast Asia, where the aesthetic dimension plays a particularly important role in the legitimation strategies of different types of authority, be they religious, politic or artistic, and where the diversity of societies range from stateless communities to kingdoms and sultanates via various models of states.
This meeting will gather together researchers from several social science fields (history, art history, literature, archaeology, epigraphy, ethnomusicology, ethnochoreology, social anthropology) and several cultural areas, inviting a dialogue between scholars of South and Southeast Asia.
Date : May 23-25, 2018
Venue : Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris
Deadline: Please submit a 300-word abstract and a short biographical note by September 30th 2017.
For more informations and for abstract submission please visit the conference website : https://autoritas.sciencesconf.org/
7th International East Nusantara Conference, 14-15/05/2018, Kupang, NTT, Indonesia
Deadline : 15 October 2017
The Seventh International East Nusantara Conference aims to create a platform whereby linguists and anthropologists can discuss the latest insights of their work relating to the languages and peoples of East Nusantara, Indonesia. The conference also seeks to bring together scholars from relevant fields such as (oral) history, archaeology, and genetics, with the specific aim of understanding migration patterns and the history of contact in the region. For the purposes of this conference, the East Nusantara region is taken to include Austronesian as well as non-Austronesian communities in eastern Indonesia (east of Bali) and Timor Leste.
Abstracts addressing any topic relating to to the languages and cultures of East Nusantara are especially welcome.
Plus d’informations sur : http://linguistlist.org/callconf/browse-conf-action.cfm?ConfID=287156
Exhibiting the Fall: Remembering and Representing War and its Aftermath in Asia (4 - 5 Sept. 2017, National Museum of Singapore)
75 years ago, Singapore, then a British colony, fell to a new imperial master – Japan. The Fall of Singapore on 15 February 1942 marks a painful moment in the island’s modern history that was followed by some 3 ½ years of brutal occupation. For Japan, the capture of Singapore represented the pinnacle of its conquests in the Pacific War and its imperial expansion into Southeast Asia. Even decades after Japan’s eventual surrender in 1945, the repercussions of this violent expansion could be felt not only in Singapore but all throughout the region – and some of this conflict’s unresolved legacies reverberate to this day, permeating the social, political and economic structure of East and Southeast Asia.
This conference – jointly organised by the National Museum (NMS) of Singapore and the Leverhulme research network “War Memoryscapes in Asia Partnership” (WARMAP) – looks at how World War II and its aftermath have been remembered and represented in Asia. It features both scholars and museum experts from Europe, Asia, and Oceania with years of research and curatorial experience in the field. Together, they will explore and discuss (1) the production, representation and consumption of war memory, (2) nationalism and nation-building as forces and frameworks for memory, (3) regionalism, diplomacy, and the politics of remembrance, and (4) material culture and museums. The keynote address will be delivered by renowned China specialist Professor Rana Mitter (University of Oxford).
The conference will take place at the National Museum of Singapore on 4-5 September 2017. For further enquiries, please contact Xiu Li of NMS ( xiu_li_tan_from.tp@nhb.gov.sg ) or Dr. Daniel Schumacher of WARMAP ( dschum@essex.ac.uk ).
SEA Studies Symposium 2018 – Call for Panels and Papers
The 7th Southeast Asian Studies Symposium will be held at the beautiful and modern Indonesian Medical Education and Research Institute (IMERI) building, part of the Faculty of Medicine of Universitas Indonesia, in Jakarta, Indonesia, from 22 to 24 March 2018
. As part of this,
the Call for Panels and Papershas been released (below).
The theme for the 7th Symposium is “What is Southeast Asia? Exploring Uniqueness and Diversity
”, and the Symposium is being organised in collaboration with the School of Environmental Science, Universitas Indonesia, and the Indonesian Environmental Science Association. We invite all who are passionate about Southeast Asia to join us in Jakarta.
Submissions on all topics related to Southeast Asia are welcome. Please visit
http://projectsoutheastasia.com/academic-events/sea-symposium-2018/cfpp for more information. The deadline for submissions is 15 October 2017
.
Offre de financement de 2 étudiant.e.s de maîtrise en géographie, Département de géographie, Université de Montréal, Canada.
Les étudiant.e.s réaliseront leur mémoire entre septembre 2017 et juin 2019. Cependant, en fonction des financements disponibles, l'offre est aussi ouverte aux étudiant.e.s de Licence qui ne commenceront leur maîtrise qu'en septembre 2018.
Date limite de candidature : 15 novembre 2017.
Thème de la recherche : "Immobilier et dynamiques urbaines en Asie du Sud-Est : approches critiques"
Objectifs: Sous la supervision de Gabriel Fauveaud, professeur invité au département de géographie et au programme d'études internationales de l'Université de Montréal, les étudiant.e.s intégreront une équipe de recherche dont les travaux portent sur les dimensions économiques, politiques, sociales et territoriales des productions, pratiques et stratégies immobilières en Asie du Sud-Est. Le projet s’intéresse tant aux espaces périurbains que centraux.
Terrains privilégiés : Phnom Penh (la capitale du Cambodge) et Yangon (la capitale économique du Myanmar).
Pour déposer sa candidature, au plus tard le 15 novembre 2017: - Soumettre un dossier regroupant les pièces suivantes : un CV détaillé, une copie des relevés de notes récents (baccalauréat et maîtrise), une lettre de motivation et deux écrits (travaux académiques, rapports, articles…) démontrant vos capacités rédactionnelles et analytiques ; - Les candidat.e.s retenu.e.s en entrevue seront contacté.e.s au plus tard vers la fin novembre, pour se joindre à l’équipe en janvier 2018 ; - Pour envoyer le dossier et pour toute question : gabriel.fauveaud@umontreal.ca
· Exposition
« Avec les danseuses royales du Cambodge », 15/06/2017 au 07/09/2017, Galerie de l’Institut Français du Cambodge
En 1927, George Groslier, directeur du musée National, entreprend pour conserver la mémoire des postures de danse du ballet royal, un exceptionnel travail de documentation photographique. Longtemps resté à l’écart, le corpus de négatifs sur verre a été récemment catalogué et numérisé. Après leur présentation au Musée National du Cambodge en 2012 puis à New York, Paris et Siem Reap, ces photographies sont exposées à l’Institut Français du Cambodge.
Exposition conçue par le MNC et l’EFEO à Phnom Penh (avec le soutien de l’IFC et de l’UNESCO)
Voir : https://institutfrancais-cambodge.com/expo-avec-les-danseuses-royales-du-cambodge/
· PUBLICATIONS
Michael Vickery’s Publications
Dissertation
"Cambodia After Angkor, the Chronicular Evidence for the Fourteenth to Sixteenth Centuries", Yale University, Ph.D., December 1977. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, University Microfilms.
Books
Cambodia 1975-1982, Boston, South End Press; Sydney, George Allen & Unwin, 1984; second edition, Chiang Mai, Silkworm Books, 1999.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1984cambodia.pdf
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1999cambodia.pdf
Kampuchea, Politics, Economics and Society, Frances Pinter (Publishers), London, Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc., Boulder, 1986.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1986kampuchea.pdf
Society, Economics and Politics in Pre-Angkor Cambodia: The 7th-8th Centuries. Tokyo, The Centre for East Asian Cultural Studies for Unesco, The Toyo Bunko, 1998.
Cambodia: A Political Survey. Phnom Penh, Funan Press, 2007. http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2007cambodia.pdf
Collections
Kicking the Vietnam Syndrome in Cambodia, collected writings 1975-2010. Published on-line, 2010, at
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf
Chapters in books
1. "The Composition and Transmission of the Ayudhya and Cambodia Chronicles", In Perceptions of the Past in Southeast Asia, ed., by Anthony Reid and David Marr, ASAA Southeast Asia Publications Series, 1979, pp. 130-154.
2. "Looking Back at Cambodia [1945-1974]", in Ben Kiernan and Chantou Boua, eds., Peasants and Politics in Kampuchea 1942- 1981, London, Zed Press, 1982, pp. 89-113.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1976looking.pdf
3. "Democratic Kampuchea, Themes and Variations", in David P. Chandler and Ben Kiernan, eds., Revolution and its Aftermath in Kampuchea: Eight Essays. Monograph Series No. 25, Yale University Southeast Asia Studies, New Haven, 1983, pp. 99-135.
4. "Some Remarks on Early State Formation in Cambodia", in Southeast Asia in the 9th to 14th Centuries, edited by David G. Marr and A.C. Milner, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University, Canberra, and Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore, 1986, pp. 95-115.
5. "Refugee Politics: The Khmer Camp System in Thailand", in David A. Ablin and Marlowe Hood, eds., The Cambodian Agony, M.E. Sharpe, Inc., New York, 1988, pp. 293-331.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1988refugee.pdf
6. "Cambodia", in Douglas Allen and Ngo Vinh Long, eds., Coming to Terms, Indochina, the United States and the War, Westview Press, Boulder, Colorado, 1991, pp. 89-128.
7. "The Ram Khamhaeng Inscription, A Piltdown Skull of Southeast Asian History?", in The
Ram Khamhaeng Controversy, Collected Papers, Edited by James R. Chamberlain, Bangkok, The Siam Society, 1991, pp. 3-52.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1991ram.pdf
8. "Piltdown Skull--Installment 2", in The Ram Khamhaeng Controversy, Collected Papers,
Edited by James R. Chamberlain, Bangkok, The Siam Society, 1991, pp. 333-418.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1991piltdown.pdf
9. "The Cambodian Economy: Where Has it Come From, Where is it Going?", in Indochina Economic Reconstruction and International Cooperation, edited by Tsutomu Murano and Ikuo Takeuchi, Tokyo, Institute of Developing Economies, 1992, pp. 47-62.
10. "Cambodia", in Joel Krieger, ed., The Oxford Companion to Politics of the World, New York-Oxford, Oxford University Press (1993), pp. 106-07.
11. "Human Rights in Cambodia", with Naomi Roht-Arriaza, in Impunity and Human Rights in International Law and Practice, edited by Naomi Roht-Arriaza. New York and Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1995, chapter 18, pp. 243-251.
12. "The Constitution of Ayutthaya", in Thai Law: Buddhist Law, Essays on the Legal History of Thnailand, Laos and Burma. Edited by Andrew Huxley, Bangkok: White Orchid Press, 1996, pp. 133-210.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1996constitution.pdf
13. “Kambodscha”. Chapter 13 in Südost Asien Handbuch. Herausgegeben von Bernhard Dahm und Roderich Ptak. München, Verlag C.H. Beck, 1999, pp. 251-262.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1999kambodscha.pdf
14. “Two Historical Records of the Kingdom of Vientiane”, in Christopher E. Goscha and Sören Ivarsson (eds.),Contesting Visions of the Lao Past Lao Historiography at the Crossroads, Copenhagen, NIAS Press, 2003.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2003two-rev.pdf *
15. Four articles in Historical Encyclopedia of Southeast Asia, edited by Dr. Keat Gin Ooi, 2004.
16. "Histoire du Champa", in Tresors de l'Art du Vietnam La Sculpture du Champa, Paris, Musée Guimet, 2005, pp. 23-35.
17. "Territorialmächte in der Prä-Angkor-Zeit Funan und Zhenla", pp. 29-32; and "Geistliche und weltliche Macht", pp. 91-92, in Angkor Göttliches Erbe Kambodschas, UNESCO 2006
18. "Introduction", in Bayon: New Perpectives, ed. Joyce Clark, Bangkok, River Books, 2006, pp. 10-27.
19. “L’inscription thaï du Phnom Kulên K 1006”, in Yoshiaki Ishizawa, Claude Jacques, Khin Sok, Manuel d’épigraphie du Cambodge, Vol. 1, EFEO, Paris, 2007, pp. 155-167
20. “A Short History of Champa”, in Champa and the Archaeology of Mỹ So’n (Vietnam), Andrew Hardy, Mauro Cucarzi,
and Patrizia Zolese, editors, Singapore, NUS Press, 2009, pp. 45-60.
21. “‘1620,’ A Cautionary Tale”, in Michael Arthur Aung-Thwin & Kenneth R. Hall, eds., New Perspectives on
the History and Historiography of Southeast Asia, Continuing Explorations
(London: Routledge, 2011), pp. 157-166.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2011cautionary.pdf
Articles and review articles
1. "Thai Regional Elites and the Reforms of King Chulalongkorn", Journal of Asian Studies
XXIX, 4 (August 1970), 863-881. http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1970thai.pdf
2. "The Khmer Inscriptions of Tenasserim: A Reinterpretation", Journal of the Siam Society
(JSS) LXI, 1 (January 1973), 51-70.
3. Review article on Robert B. Jones, Thai Titles and Ranks Including a Translation of Traditions
of Royal Lineage in Siam by King Chulalongkorn, JSS LXII, 1 (January 1974), pp. 159-174.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1974review-rev.pdf *
4. "A Note on the Date of the Traibhūmikathā", JSS LXII, 2 (July 1974), pp. 275-284.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1974note-rev.pdf *
5. "The Lion Prince and Related Remarks on Northern History", JSS LXIV, 1 (January 1976), pp. 326-377.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1976lion.pdf
6. Review article on Jeremias van Vliet, The Short History of the Kings of Siam, JSS LXIV,
2 (July 1976), pp. 207-236.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1976review-rev.pdf *
7. "Looking Back at Cambodia", Westerly (University of Western Australia), No. 4, December 1976.
8. "The 2/k.125 Fragment, a Lost Chronicle of Ayutthaya", JSS LXV, 1 (January 1977), 1-80.
9. "A Guide Through Some Recent Sukhothai Historiography", JSS LXVI, 2 (July 1978), 182-246.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1978guide-rev.pdf *
10. "A New Tāµnān About Ayudhya", JSS LXVII, 2 (July 1979), pp. 123-86.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1979new.pdf *
11. "King Mangrai and the Le-shih, JSS LXVIII, 1 (January 1980), pp. 126-127.
12. "Democratic Kampuchea: CIA to the Rescue", Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars,
14/4 (1982), pp. 45-54. http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1982democratic.pdf
13. "L'Inscription K 1006 du Phnom Kulen", Bulletin de l'Ecole Française d'Extrême-Orient, LXXI, 1982, pp. 77-86. http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1982linscription.pdf
14. "Qui était Na/Nong, savant(s) cambodgien(s) des XVIII/XIX siècles?", ASEMI (Asie du sud-est et monde insulindien), Cambodge I, Vol. XIII, 1-4, Paris, 1982, 81-86.
15. Serge Thion et Michael Vickery, "Cambodge: Quelques problèmes de la reconstruction", ASEMI, Cambodge, vol. XIII, 1-4, Paris, 1982, 395-420.
16. "Prolegomena to Methods for Using the Ayutthayan Laws as Historical Source Material",JSS, vol 72 (1984), 37-58.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1984prolegomena-rev.pdf *
17. "The Reign of Sūryavarman I and Royal Factionalism at Angkor", Journal of Southeast Asian Studies,
Vol. 16, No. 2, September 1985, 226-244.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1985reign.pdf
18. "Cambodia's Tenuous Progress", Indochina Issues no. 63, January 1986. Center for
International Policy, Indochina Project, Washington, D.C.
19. "Some New Evidence for the Cultural History of Central Thailand", The Siam Society's
Newsletter, Volume 2, Number 3 (September 1986), 4-6.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1986some.pdf
20. "From Lamphun to Inscription No. 2", The Siam Society Newsletter, 3/1 (March 1987), pp. 2-6.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1987from.pdf
21. "Criminal Law in the Peoples Republic of Kampuchea", Journal of Contemporary Asia,
Vol. 17, No. 4 (1987), 508-518.
22. "Cambodia 1988", ASIEN (German Association for Asian Studies, Hamburg), Nr. 28, July 1988, pp. 1-19.
23. "A Critique of the Lawyers Committee for International Human Rights, Kampuchea Mission of November 1984",Journal of Contemporary Asia vol. 18, No. 1, 1988, pp. 108-116.
24. "How Many Died in Pol Pot's Kampuchea", Correspondence, Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, 20/1 (1988), pp. 70-73.
25. "Cambodia (Kampuchea): History, Tragedy, and Uncertain Future", Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, Vol. 21, Nos. 2-4 (April-Dec. 1989), pp. 35-58.
26. "La kremlinologie face au Cambodge" (translated by M.-Cl. Orieux), Affaires cambodgiennes 1979-1989, Asie-Débat-5, Paris L'Harmattan, 1989, pp. 129-35.
27. "Comments on Cham Population Figures", Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, Vol. 22, No. 1, Jan.-Mar. 1990, pp. 31-33.
28. "Cambodian Political Economy, 1975-1990", Cultural Survival Quarterly, Volume 14, Number 3, 1990, pp. 23-27.
29. "Cultural Survival in Language and Literature in Cambodia Today", Cultural Survival Quarterly, Volume 14, Number 3, 1990, pp. 49-52.
30. "The Rule of Law in Cambodia", Cultural Survival Quarterly, Volume 14, Number 3, 1990, pp. 82-83.
31. "Notes on the Political Economy of the Peoples Republic of Kampuchea (PRK)", Journal of Contemporary Asia,
Vol. 20, No. 4 (1990), pp. 435-65.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf pp. 50-81.
32. "The Old City of 'Chaliang'--'Srī Satchanalai'--'Sawankhalok', a Problem in History and Historiography",Journal of the Siam Society, Vol. 78, Part 2 (1990), pp. 15-29.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1990old-rev.pdf *
33. "Cambodia: November-December 1990", Thai-Yunnan Project Newsletter, No. 12,
March 1991, Department of Anthropology, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University.
34. "Cambodia: November-December 1990", Journal of Contemporary Asia, Vol. 21, No. 2 (1991), pp. 274-282.
35. "The Campaign Against Cambodia: 1990-1991", Indochina Issues 93, August 1991.
36. "On Traibhūmikathā", Journal of the Siam Society, Vol. 79, Part 2, 1991, pp. 24-36.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1991on-rev.pdf *
37. "Loan Words and Devoicing in Khmer", Mon-Khmer Studies XVIII-XIX (1989-1990), pp. 240-250.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1989-1990loan.pdf
38. "A 'Modern' Number Term in Old Khmer", Mon-Khmer Studies, XXI (1992), pp. 191-3.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1992modern.pdf
39. "Evidence for Prehistoric Austronesian-Khmer Contact and Linguistic Borrowing",
Mon-Khmer Studies, XXI (1992), pp. 185-89.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1992evidence.pdf
40. "The Cold War and Cambodia", Journal of Oriental Studies 30, Centre of Asian Studies,
University of Hong Kong, 1992, pp. 87-118.
41. "What and Where was Chenla?", Recherches nouvelles sur le Cambodge. Publiées sous la direction de F. Bizot. École française d'Extrême-Orient, Paris, 1994, pp. 197-212.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1994what.pdf
42. "Cambodia: a Political Survey", Discussion Paper No. 14, The Department of Political and Social Change, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University, Canberra, 1994.
43. "The Cambodian People's Party: Where Has it Come From, Where is it Going?", Southeast Asian Affairs 1994. Singapore. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. 1994, pp. 102-17.
44. "Piltdown 3: Further Discussion of the Ram Khamhaeng Inscription", Journal of the Siam Society, Volume 83, Parts 1 & 2 (1995), pp. 103-198.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1995piltdown3-rev.pdf *
45. "What to do About The Khmers", review article on David P. Chandler and Ian Mabbett, The Khmers, in Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 27, part 2 (September 1996), pp. 389-404.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1996what.pdf
46. "The Khmer Inscriptions of Roluos (Preah Ko and Lolei): Documents from a Transitional Period in Cambodian History",
in Seksa Khmer, Nouvelle Série No. 1 (janvier 1999), Phnom Penh, pp. 47-92.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1999khmer.pdf
47. “Coedès’ Histories of Cambodia”, Silpakorn University International Journal (Bangkok, Thailand), Volume 1, Number 1,
January-June 2000, pp. 61-108.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2000coedes.pdf
48. “Resolving the Chronology and History of 9th-Century Cambodia”, Siksācakr, Newsletter of the Center for Khmer Studies
(CKS) No. 3, Siemreap, July 2001, pp. 17-23.
49. “Funan Reviewed: Deconstructing the Ancients”, Bulletin de l'École Française d'Extrême-Orient, 90-91, 2003-2004, pp. 101-143.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2003funan.pdf , http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2003funan-rev.pdf *
50. “Cambodia and its Neighbors in the 15th Century”, Asia Research Institute Working Paper Series No. 27, Singapore, 2004.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2004cambodia.pdf
51. "Cambodia and its Neighbors in the 15th Century” ( short version of no. 50), in Geoff Wade & Sun Laichen, editors,Southeast Asia in the Fifteenth Century, The China Factor, Singapore, NUS Press, National University o Singapore, 2010, pp.271-306.
52. "A Misstep toward a New History of Cambodia", Review article on Karl-Heinz Golzio, Geschichte Kambodschas. Das Land der Khmer von Angkor bis zur Gegenwart, München: Verlag C.H. Beck 2003. In Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft, Band 155, Heft 1, 2005, pp. 239-251.
53. "Champa Revised", 2005, long version available as ARI WPS No. 37 at the following URL:
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2005champa.pdf
54. "Champa Revised", short version to be published in a conference book by Asia Research Institute, University of Singapore.
55. " Bayon: New Perspectives Reconsidered”, Udaya,VII, 2006, pp. 101-176.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2006bayon.pdf
Unpublished conference papers
1. “Comparisons of Revolution and Non-Revolution in Asia”, conference of the Asian Studies Association of Australia, Adelaide, 13-18 May 1984.
2. “Borders of Cambodia”, conference on “Southeast Asian Borders in Regional Context”, Australian National University, Canberra, October 1993.
3. “Democracy and Human Rights in Cambodia”, Michael Vickery and Ramses Amer, Phnom Penh, Penang, and Stockholm 1996
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1996democracy.pdf
4. “The Nogai Diplomatic Correspondence with Moscow”, Michael Vickery, Yale University 1969.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1969nogai.pdf
5. “A legend concerning Jayavarman II”, first presented at EFEO Paris in September 2004, since revised (and subject to further revision).
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2004legend.pdf
Scholarly Reviews
1. Three collections of Thai historical documents, Journal of the Siam Society (JSS) LX, 1 (January 1972), 396-409..
2. A collection of Thai historical documents, JSS LX, 2 (July 1972), 318-328.
3. A volume of Thai historical documents, Ro’a dra
t
aº cau pra:derāj kru ra
t
anakosindr rājakāl dī 1
(‘On the Appointment of Vassal Rulers in the First Bangkok Reign’), JSS LXI, 1 (January 1973), 351-356.
4. H.L. Shorto, A Dictionary of the Mon Inscriptions from the Sixth to the Sixteenth Centuries,JSS LXI, 2 (July 1973), 205-209.
5. Yoneo Ishii, et. al., Glossarial Index of the Sukhothai Inscriptions, JSS LXII, 1 (January 1974), 256-258
6. Yoneo Ishii, et.al., An Index of Officials in Traditional Thai Governments, JSS LXIII, 2 (July 1975), 419-430.
7. David Wyatt, The Crystal Sands: The Chronicles of Nagara Sri Dharmaraja, in Journal of
Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. VIII, No. 1 (March 1977), pp. 118-120.
8. Osborne, Milton, Before Kampuchea, in Asian Studies Association of Australia Review, 1980, pp. 125-27.
9. Klaus Rosenberg, Nation und Fortschritt Der Publizist Thien Wan und Die Modernisierung Thailands unter König Culalongkon (r.1868-1910),Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, XIII, 2, September 1982.
10. Grant Evans, The Yellow Rainmakers, in Australian Outlook, 1984, p. 54.
11. Martin Stuart-Fox (ed.), Contemporary Laos. University of Queensland Press. St. Lucia, 1982, in Australian Outlook 1984, pp. 124-25.
12. Kenneth R. Hall, Maritime Trade and State Development in Early Southeast Asia, Journal of Asian Studies, 1987, pp. 211-213. http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1987maritime.pdf
13. Laws of Southeast Asia Vol. I: The Pre-Modern Texts, Edited by M.B. Hooker, 1986, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies (Singapore), Vol. 19, No. 2, 1988, pp. 363-363. CHECK
14. Elizabeth Becker, When the War Was Over and Nayan Chanda, Brother Enemy, inASIEN, German Association for Asian Studies, Hamburg, Nr. 28, July 1988, pp. 116-117.
15. Mayoury and Pheuiphanh Ngaosyvathn, Chao Anou 1767- 829 pasason lao lee asi akhane ['Chao Anou, 1767-1829, the Lao people and Southeast Asia'], Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 21, 2 (September 1990), 441-45.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1990chao.pdf
16. The Travels of Mendes Pinto, edited and translated by Rebecca D. Catz, in Asian Studies Review (Australia),Volume 14, Number 3 (April 1991), pp. 251-253.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1991travels.pdf
17. "George Condominas, From Lawa to Mon, from Saa' to Thai", Review article in Thai-
Yunnan Project Newsletter, Australian National University, Number Thirteen, June 1991, pp. 3-9.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1991george.pdf
18. Ramses Amer, The General Assembly and the Kampuchean Issues, Report No. 31,
Department of Peace and Conflict Research Uppsala University, 1989, in Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 23, 1 (1992), pp. 167-69.
19. Geoffrey C. Gunn and Jefferson Lee, Cambodia Watching Down Under, Bangkok, Institute of Asian Studies, Chulalongkorn University, 1991, in Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 23, 2 (1992), pp. 438-42.
20. Jennifer W. Cushman, Family and State, The Formation of a Sino-Thai Tin-Mining Dynasty 1797-1932, Singapore, Oxford University Press, 1991, in Kajian Malaysia, X, 2 (December 1992), pp. 87-90.
21. Trevor Findlay, Cambodia the Legacy and Lessons of UNTAC, Stockholm: Stockholm International Peace Research Institute and Oxford University Press. 1995; and Timothy Carney and Tan Lian Choo, Whither Cambodia?
Beyond the Election, Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1993, in Journal of Southeast Asian Studies,
Vol. 26, No. 2 (September 1995), pp. 439-443. http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1995findlay.pdf
22. Mak Phoeun, Histoire du Cambodge de la fin du XVIe siècle au début du XVIIIe, in Bulletin
de l'École Française d'Extrême-Orient Tome 83 (1996), pp. 405-15.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1996mak.pdf
Journalism
1. An article on the Cambodian National Ballet, in Standard Bangkok Magazine, 21 August 1971, pp. 14-15.
2. Five articles on contemporary Cambodia, published in the Canberra Times:
"Phnom Penh Decays Behind a Bustling, Cheerful Facade", 22 October 1981;
"Communists Are Scarce in Today's Kampuchea", 26 October 1981;
"Kampuchea's Markets are Totally Free and Thrive on Smuggling", 29 October 1981; "Supervised Free Elections Could Become a Farce", 2 November 1981;
in http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf pp. 149-154
"Border Diplomacy Lesson given by Thailand", 9 November, 1981.
3. "Kampuchea's International Position", Vietnam Today (Canberra), no.19, November 1981.
4. "Recent Propaganda on Kampuchea", Vietnam Today (Canberra), No. 25, May 1983.
5. "Where Defence is Still the Priority" The Guardian (UK), 8 January 1985.
6. "Phnom Penh, decembre 1984" [French adaptation of "Where defence is Still the Priority", by Serge Thion], in Cambodge histoire et enjeux: 1945-1985, L'Harmattan, Paris, 1975.
7. "Sihanouk to go home as an honored senior citizen?", Sydney Morning Herald, 1 March 1985.
8. "Cambodia's long road to recovery", The Age (Melbourne), 20 March 1985.
9. "Phnom Penh Revisited: Gone is the Gloom", Inside Asia (London), No 5, Sept-Oct 1985.
10. "Kampuchea Edges Away From Hanoi", Canberra Times, 5 January 1987.
11. “Amnesty International och kriget mot Kampuchea”, Kommentar (Stockholm), Nr 8/1988, pp. 33-39; an abridged Swedish translation of an unpublished paper, “Amnesty International and the War Againt Cambodia”, sent to several participants in the June 1987 international NGO conference in Brussels.
12. "Cambodia: Laying some Groundwork", The Nation (Bangkok), 5 February 1989
13. "Economic Headway in Cambodia", The Nation (Bangkok), 12 February 1989
14. "Rättigheter bättre idag än tidigare" [critique of Amnesty report on Cambodia],
Kommentar (Stockholm), 4/1989, pp. 33-36.
15. "Outside powers' manipulations fascinate the Cambodia watchers", The Guardian Weekly, 26 July 1990.
16. "Notable changes in Phnom Penh", The Nation (Bangkok), 5 January 1991.
17. "Chea Sim: The Hardline Leader?", The Nation (Bangkok), 6 January 1991.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf pp. 363-367
18. "Is Cambodia Ready for Liberalization?", The Nation (Bangkok), 13 January 1991.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf pp. 367-371
19. "A Change of Heart? US motives suspect in Cambodian peace process", Aliran Monthly
(Penang Malaysia), Vol 11, No 7 (1991), pp. 22-26.
20. "Elakt spel om Kambodja" (Swedish version of nos. 14-16), Kommentar (Stockholm), NR
1/91 (1991), pp. 30-35.
21. "Rauhansopimus merkitsee kambodzalle lopun alkua" ['The peace agreement is the beginning of the end for Cambodia'], Helsingin Sanomat, 10 January 1992.
22. Överlever Kambodja 'Freden'" ['Will Cambodia survive the peace?'], Kommentar
(Stockholm), Nr 1-2, 1992, pp. 3-13
23. "Cambodia After the Peace", Thai-Yunnan Project Newsletter, Canberra, Australian
National University, Number Seventeen, June 1992, pp. 3-18.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf pp. 384-416
24. "Cambodia's Elections: Retrospect and Prospect", Phnom Penh Post 1/6, Sept 25, 1992.
25. "Khmer Elections: Retrospect and Prospect", The Nation (Bangkok), Nov 13, 1992.
26. "Cambodian polls: Untac promoting a 1955 result?", The Nation November 14, 1992.
27. "Amnesty report", The Nation (Bangkok), 12 Feb 1994
28. "Phnom Penh Power Plays", The Nation, 15 April 1994.
29. "Myths in Cambodian journalism", The Nation, 16 July 1994.
30. "PRK unfairly remembered", Phnom Penh Post, vol. 4, no. 8, 21 April-4 May, 1995, pp.
6, 19 (including a review of Esmeralda Luciolli, Le mur de bambou).
31. "The debate to apportion blame", Phnom Penh Post, vol. 4, no. 16, 11-24 August 1995, p.7
32. "Kambodja, En rättvis betraktelse" [original English title, "Cambodia three years later"],
Kommentar (Stockholm), Nr 2, 1996, pp. 15-24.
33. "The tricks of democracy, thanks to the Great Powers", Phnom Penh Post, vol. 5, no. 22,
31 October-14 November, 1996, p. 13.
34. "Son Sen and all that--challenging the KR pundits", Phnom Penh Post, vol. 5, no. 24, 29
November-12 December, 1996, p. 7.
35. "Whither Cambodia's democracy", The Nation (Bangkok), 16 MaY 1997, p. A4.
36. "Whither Cambodian democracy?", Phnom Penh Post, vol. 6, no. 11, 30 May-June 12, 1997, p. 9.
37. "Foreign interference: enough is enough", Phnom Penh Post, vol. 6, no. 12, 13-26 June 1997, p. 9.
38. "A non-standard view of the 'coup'", Phnom Penh Post, vol. 6, no. 17, 29 August-11 September 1997, p. 11.
39. "Flip side view of Cambodia's woes", The Nation, 18 November 1997
40. "Ed's OK, what about Hayes?", Phnom Penh Post, 30/1-13/2, 1998.
41. "From Info-Ed to the UN Center for Human Rights", Phnom Penh Post, vol. 7, no. 7, 10-24 April, 1998
42. "Revisiting the legalities of '93", Phnom Penh Post, vol. 7, no. 10, 22 May-4 June 1998
43. “Troubling Conjunctions”, Phnom Penh Post, vol. 10, no. 1, January 5-18, 2001.
44. "Hayes sells paper, soul", Phnom Penh Post, Vol. 10/9, April 27 - May 10, 2001, letter
45. "From Ionia to Viet Nam". Phnom Penh Post, vol. 12/14, July 4 - 17, 2003
46. "Wrong on Gottesman", critique of Luke Hunt's review of Gottesman, PPP, 14/2, 28/1-10/2, 2005, p. 13
47. "The Future of Thailand?", 1977, rewritten 1979, details and notes in 2011; unpublished.
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1977future.pdf
48. "Review of Nayan Chanda ‘Brother Enemy’"; unpublished, in
http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf pp. 193-219
Many of these articles are collected in http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf
Other publication
GUERIN, Mathieu, "Paysans et bandits dans les rizières, La violence dans les campagnes cambodgiennes pendant la Grande Dépression", Histoire et Sociétés Rurales, n° 47, 1er semestre 2017, p. 41-74.
MARYANN BLANDER, Migration Disruption: Crisis and Continuity in the Cambodian Mass Returns.
Beavan, Nancy, Derek Hamilton, Tep Sokha, and Kerry Sayle. “Radiocarbon Dates from the Highland Jar and Coffin Burial Site of Phnom Khnang Peung, Cardamom Mountains, Cambodia.” Radiocarbon 57, no. 01 (2015): 15–31. doi:10.2458/AZU_RC.57.18194.
William B. Noseworthy, “Articulations of Southeast Asian Religious Modernisms: Islam in Early 20th Century Cambodia & Cochinchina”
IAN G.BAIRD, Biography and Borderlands: Chao Sone Bouttarobol, a Champassak Royal, and Thailand, Laos and Cambodia, Institute for East Asian Studies, Sogang University 2017