Japanese Journal of Southeast Asian Studies
Online ISSN : 2424-1377
Print ISSN : 0563-8682
ISSN-L : 0563-8682
Volume 33, Issue 3
Displaying 1-11 of 11 articles from this issue
Special Issue
Thirtieth Anniversary Issue
  • Yoshihiro Tsubouchi
    1995 Volume 33 Issue 3 Pages 285-302
    Published: December 31, 1995
    Released on J-STAGE: January 31, 2018
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Shigeo Nishimura
    1995 Volume 33 Issue 3 Pages 303-316
    Published: December 31, 1995
    Released on J-STAGE: January 31, 2018
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  • Classmates, Internal Conflicts and Relations with the Government of the Military
    Yoshifumi Tamada
    1995 Volume 33 Issue 3 Pages 317-339
    Published: December 31, 1995
    Released on J-STAGE: January 31, 2018
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  • Somkiat Konchan, Yoshiaki Nakada, Hayao Fukui
    1995 Volume 33 Issue 3 Pages 340-362
    Published: December 31, 1995
    Released on J-STAGE: January 31, 2018
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    In all of three villages studied in Amphoe (District) Kham Khuan Kaeo, Changwat (Province) Yasothon, rice was cultivated almost exclusively for subsistence till the late 1970s. The paddy area per person showed a similar pattern of change from the 1920s in all three villages; it declined until hitting bottom a few decades ago, and remained little changed from then till the 1970s, although there are substantial inter-village differences in when it reached the bottom as well as in acreage per person at that level. The former reflects the length of village history: the earlier a village was founded, the earlier the per capita paddy area hit bottom. The latter reflects differences in the average yield of rice per unit area, which is largely determined by the soil and water conditions. The actual per capita rice supply remained at a similar level in all three villages till the late 1970s regardless of the varying area per person.
     Rural-rural emigration (leaving one's village permanently for frontier lands elsewhere) and the reclamation of inferior land within villages were common till the early 1960s, being the only means to relieve population pressure. The former was more common in the oldest village, where the acreage per person shrank earliest. Temporary employment in off-farm jobs in urban areas, mostly in the Bangkok metropolitan area, began in the 1950s. In the late 1980s, the labor force engaged in temporary out-of-village jobs accounted for 10 to 16 percent of the village's total labor force. Permanent emigration to urban areas is also observed since the 1970s, and its frequency is roughly proportional to that of temporary emigration.
     The existence in a village of uplands to grow cash crops such as kenaf and cassava appears to have had least effect on the rural-rural emigration but to have suppressed the temporary and, thence, permanent emigration to Bangkok.
     In sum, the villages were able to accommodate increases in population as long as potential paddyland was available. Once it was exhausted, however, the excess population had to leave the villages. Till the early 1960s, most migrants made for frontier lands. The maintenance of self-sufficiency in rice thereafter should be attributed more to a likely decrease in the birth rate than to rural-urban migration. The principle of self-sufficiency in rice for those remaining in a village applied throughout the period under study, and the extra cash income either from upland farming or off-farm employment did not become an important determinant of the village population but contributed to the increased cash income.
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  • From Intensification to Diversification
    Koji Tanaka
    1995 Volume 33 Issue 3 Pages 363-378
    Published: December 31, 1995
    Released on J-STAGE: January 31, 2018
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  • A Comparative Study of Korea and Thailand
    Kunio Yoshihara
    1995 Volume 33 Issue 3 Pages 379-426
    Published: December 31, 1995
    Released on J-STAGE: January 31, 2018
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  • With Special Reference to the Development of Plow Technology
    Toshiaki Ohji
    1995 Volume 33 Issue 3 Pages 427-462
    Published: December 31, 1995
    Released on J-STAGE: January 31, 2018
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  • Isamu Yamada
    1995 Volume 33 Issue 3 Pages 463-468
    Published: December 31, 1995
    Released on J-STAGE: January 31, 2018
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Aloeswood is one of the most valuable minor forest products of the Southeast Asian tropical rain forests. Borneo is a center of Aquilaria spp. and many people are collecting aloeswood from upriver mountain ranges. The collected materials are sent downriver to the harbor cities and thence to Singapore, the largest commercial center of aloeswood, where merchants gather from Arabia. Bangladesh and China. Seventy percent of aloeswood is sent to Arab countries and the rest to the China area. Artificial plantations of Aquilaria spp. and various experimental trials to produce aloeswood are being made by local researchers and merchants.
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  • Narifumi Maeda Tachimoto
    1995 Volume 33 Issue 3 Pages 469-483
    Published: December 31, 1995
    Released on J-STAGE: January 31, 2018
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  • James Danandjaja
    1995 Volume 33 Issue 3 Pages 484-496
    Published: December 31, 1995
    Released on J-STAGE: January 31, 2018
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  • Hisao Furukawa
    1995 Volume 33 Issue 3 Pages 497-518
    Published: December 31, 1995
    Released on J-STAGE: January 31, 2018
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