Japanese Journal of Southeast Asian Studies
Online ISSN : 2424-1377
Print ISSN : 0563-8682
ISSN-L : 0563-8682
Volume 8, Issue 3
Displaying 1-8 of 8 articles from this issue
Articles
  • Kenjiro Ichikawa
    Article type: Article
    1970 Volume 8 Issue 3 Pages 292-304
    Published: February 06, 1971
    Released on J-STAGE: June 06, 2019
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
     How does the Peking or the Taipei Government influence over the Chinese in Southeast Asia? What kinds of response do the Chinese in Southeast Asia make for changing international circumstance? Do they have anti-Japanese attitude against the increasing Japanese economic power in the region or not? For giving answers to these questions, the author in the paper examines critically on behavior patterns of the Chinese, laying emphasis on a life-history of Chang Lan-chen, former Chairman of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce in Thailand.
     Although it is a hard matter to generalize patterns of behavior through a study of life-history, it may safely be said that 1) the conflict of ideas by social stratification, generation gap and urban-rural differences within a Chinese society is an important core of the questions mentioned above, 2) Chinese leaders of the economic circle have to co-operate with political measures of their government where they live, in order to continue their business activities under the protection of the government, 3) and yet the conflict of ideas always exists within their own society in transition.
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  • Ⅲ. Hedyotis (Rubiaceae) of Thailand
    Nobuyuki Fukuoka
    1970 Volume 8 Issue 3 Pages 305-336
    Published: February 06, 1971
    Released on J-STAGE: June 06, 2019
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Tomoya Akihama, Tadayo Watabe
    1970 Volume 8 Issue 3 Pages 337-346
    Published: February 06, 1971
    Released on J-STAGE: June 06, 2019
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    1) Geographical distributions of the wild rices, Oryza sativa f. spontanea and O. perennis were mapped after an extensive collection covering almost all areas in Thailand.
    2) The wild rices are found to distribute in swamp areas in dry season. The cultivated rice grows well also in these areas. So the suitable area for rice cultivation might be judged from the distribution of the wild rices.
    3) Collected samples were raised in a green house in order to investigate the nineteen characters in detail by the use of the principal component analysis. The ecotypes of the samples collected from north and northeast Thailand had a wide range of variation.
    4) The characters that seem responsible for ecotypic differentiations are self-fertility, length-breadth ratio of grains, bending of nodes, length of uppermost internode, etc.
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