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2 - Documenting Social and Economic Transformation in Myanmar's Rural Communities

from Part II - People

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2019

Samuel Pursch
Affiliation:
Research and strategy advisor working on governance and social development in Myanmar and across Southeast Asia.
Andrea Woodhouse
Affiliation:
Senior social development specialist at the World Bank.
Michael Woolcock
Affiliation:
Lead social scientist with the World Bank's Development Research Group, and a (part-time) Lecturer in Public Policy at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government.
Matthew Zurstrassen
Affiliation:
Development professional working on social research and justice programs in the Asia Pacific Region and managed research for the World Bank's “Livelihoods and Social Change in Rural Myanmar” study.
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Myanmar has undergone significant reforms in recent years. A commonly accepted view is that, unlike many of the political shifts experienced elsewhere in the world in the twenty-first century, their impetus came not “from below” but from national elites, prompted by military decisions to open the country to the world and begin to democratize (Pederson 2012, Fink 2014). Much of the literature on Myanmar's transition thus focuses on national dynamics, seeking insights on what has changed, why, and how, by examining shifts among political elites, the business community, and the upper echelons of the Tatmadaw (see Pederson 2012; ICG 2012; Jones 2014). These changes emerged from a variety of elite-led processes, including the drafting of a new constitution in 2008, and accelerated under the Thein Sein-led government starting in 2011. Yet while analysing the motives and strategies of elites is vital for understanding the national impetus behind Myanmar's reforms, it leaves little space for assessing how the transition has played out among the broader populace, particularly in the rural villages where seventy per cent of Myanmar's people live. It also overlooks how the prevailing social institutions at the local level have responded to the various forms and sources of contention (actual and/or potential) inherently accompanying such major changes, and the associated implications for policy and practice in Myanmar.

This paper seeks to contribute to research on Myanmar's social transformation by analysing how governance reforms and changes in the life experiences of people in rural communities are altering the social contract at the village level. The paper argues that the nature and extent of the “social contract”—i.e., the terms on which citizens interact with one another, and the basis on which contending views of citizens’ core rights and responsibilities are negotiated with and legitimately upheld by the state—is being re-written in Myanmar. Three areas of change, especially since 2011, have affected how citizens in rural areas interact with the state: village governance, citizens’ expectations of the state, and connectivity. Responding to these challenges will require strategies informed by the best available evidence.

Type
Chapter
Information
Myanmar Transformed?
People, Places and Politics
, pp. 23 - 52
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2018

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