ABSTRACT

This book seeks to illuminate how Thai elites have used democracy as an instrument for order and discipline. Drawing on interviews, numerous Thai language sources, and critical theory, the author reveals a remarkable adaptation of the idea of democracy in the Thai context. Connors shows how elites have drawn on Western political theory to design projects to create modern citizens. He argues that it is possible to see the idea and practice of elite liberal democracy in Thailand, and elsewhere, as a key ideological resource in the project of securing hegemony over undisciplined populations. In this perspective the ideas of civil society, civic virtue, social capital and democracy itself are all part of the weaponry deployed in an effort to create 'good citizens', who act as guardians of the elite defined common good.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

Talking democracy

chapter |27 pages

Before the doctrine

From constitutional democracy to Thai-style democracy

chapter |32 pages

Developmental democracy

Villages, insurgency and security

chapter |37 pages

Delayed liberalism, the general will

The doctrine entrenched

chapter |26 pages

Citizen King

Embodying Thainess

chapter |37 pages

Rethinking the nation in times of crisis

Democracy, civic engagement and community

chapter |3 pages

Final comments