\aCivil society and political change in Asia : \b expanding and contracting democratic space / \c edited by Muthiah Alagappa.
260
3#
\aStanford, Calif : \b Stanford University Press, \c 2004.
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\axxii, 528 p. : \b ill.
504
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\aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
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\aPart I. Conceptual Perspective -- 1. Civil Society and Political Change: An Analytical Framework -- Part II. Legitimate Civil Society: Negotiating Democratic Space -- 2. Indonesia: Transformation of Civil Society and Democratic Breakthrough -- 3. The Philippines: Fractious Civil Society and Competing Visions of Democracy -- 4. South Korea: Confrontational Legacy and Democratic Contributions -- 5. Taiwan: No Civil Society, No Democracy -- 6. India: Expanding and Contracting Democratic Space -- 7. Japan: Social Capital Without Advocacy -- Part III. Controlled and Communalized Civil Society: Challenging and Reinforcing the State -- 8. Malaysia: Construction of Counterhegemonic Narratives and Agendas -- 9. Sri Lanka: Ethnic Domination, Violence, and Illiberal Democracy -- 10. Singapore: Engagement and Autonomy Within the Political Status Quo -- Part IV. Repressed Civil Society: Penetrated, Co-opted, and Avoiding the State -- 11. Pakistan: Civil Society in the Service of an Authoritarian State -- 12. Burma: Civil Society Skirting Regime Rules -- 13. China: The Limits of Civil Society in a Late Leninist State -- 14. The Nonstate Public Sphere in Asia: Dynamic Growth, Institutionalization Lag -- 15. Civil Society and Democratic Change: Indeterminate Connection, Transforming Relations