ABSTRACT

Lively debates around property, access to resources, legal rights, and the protection of livelihoods have unfolded in Vietnam since the economic reforms of 1986. Known as Doi Moi (changing to the new), these have gradually transformed the country from a socialist state to a society in which a communist party presides over a neoliberal economy.

By exploring the complex relationship between property, the state, society, and the market, this book demonstrates how both developmental issues and state-society relations in Vietnam can be explored through the prism of property relations and property rights. The essays in this collection demonstrate how negotiations over property are deeply enmeshed with dynamics of state formation, and covers debates over the role of the state and its relationship to various levels of society, the intrusion of global forces into the lives of marginalized communities and individuals, and how community norms and standards shape and reshape national policy and laws.

With contributors from around the world, this book will be of great interest to students and scholars of East and Southeast Asian studies, including politics, culture, society, and law, as well as those interested in the role of the state and property relations more generally.

chapter |11 pages

Property and values

State, society and market in Vietnam

part |56 pages

Land, labor and the state

chapter |18 pages

Property and poverty in southern Vietnam

Colonial and postcolonial perspectives

chapter |22 pages

Bodies in perpetual motion

Struggles over the meaning, value, and purpose of fuzzy labor on the eve of collectivization

chapter |14 pages

Social demolition

Creative destruction and the production of value in Vietnamese land clearance

part |62 pages

Intangible property

chapter |23 pages

Appropriating culture

The politics of intangible cultural heritage in Vietnam

chapter |20 pages

Would a saola by any other name still be a saola?

Appropriating rare animals, expropriating minority peoples