The Village in Transition
฿300
ประเภทหนังสือ :
หนังสือเล่ม
ปีที่พิมพ์ : 2561
ผู้แต่ง : Kodai Harada
สำนักพิมพ์ : CHIANG MAI UNIVERSITY PRESS
ISBN : 9786163982193
ภาษา : English
จำนวนหน้า : 148
ปีที่พิมพ์ : 2561
ผู้แต่ง : Kodai Harada
สำนักพิมพ์ : CHIANG MAI UNIVERSITY PRESS
ISBN : 9786163982193
ภาษา : English
จำนวนหน้า : 148
INTRODUCTION
Starting from the 1950s, Thailand had experienced
unprecedented economic boom in the nation’s history
until the 1980s. The average annual growth in the
1960s was 8%, 7%in the 1970s, and 4-6% in the
beginning of the 1980s [1]. Thai people, especially
those who are in the nation’s capital, Bangkok,
enjoyed the economic boom and started to have
“modernized” lifestyle. However, behind the scene of the national economic success, rural villages were
forced to face predicament because of the urbancentered industrial economy based on neo-liberal
economic beliefs.
In light of the historical context of the relationship
between Thai community and the high-powered state
authority, examining one specific community which
is struggling to find a way of development in the
globalized world today will be of great help to
understand the contemporary notion of rural
development in Thailand. In this paper, focus is
centered on a village called Mae Kampong, which
has been under great influence of the Royal project
and the Government in terms of development, and yet
has a great deal of potential for achieving a selfreliant way of community governance because of its
traits as a traditional agrarian rural community. This
paper aims to examine the socio-cultural changes that
occurred in the village over the course of the
contemporary development and ultimately the
outlook of community self-sufficiency and selfreliance, deploying a realistic and empirical approach
to look at the Thailand’s contemporary phenomena
happening in the rural communities.
Mae Kampong is the third village of seven villages in
Huai Kaew sub-district, Mae On district, Chiang Mai
province, Northern Thailand, known as a major
producer of Northern Thai traditional tea product
called Mieng. It is located east of Chiang Mai
province, about 50 kilometers from the city, average
1,300 meters above the sea level. It has been about
100 years since the first generation of this village that
had been searching for suitable places for tea
cultivation came from nearby areas to settle in the
location and started to form the community. Now, the
village has 134 households and 374 people in total.
The village consists of six clusters, Pang Nok, Pang
Klang, Pang Khon, Pang Ton, Pan Nai No.1, and
Pang Nai No.2.