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Preface to the Second Edition

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 September 2023

Andrew Selth
Affiliation:
Griffith University, Queensland
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Summary

A bibliography is never complete. No matter how conscientious the compiler there will always be gaps and scope for additions, particularly to select bibliographies. In this regard, Burma (renamed the Union of Myanmar in 1989, and given the formal title of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar in the 2008 constitution) is certainly no exception. Indeed, several developments over the past three years argue strongly for the preparation of an updated check-list of the English language literature on Burma.

Since the first edition of this work was released in 2012, there has been an increasing flow of new, revised and reprinted publications about Burma. This activity has reflected the continued high level of interest in the country, not only in official and academic circles but also among the wider public. This interest is likely to be maintained in 2015, when Burma’s hybrid civilian-military government is due to hold national elections, and in early 2016, when it will choose a new president. The outcome of these competitions will be critical to the future of President Thein Sein’s ambitious reform programme, launched in 2011, and to Burma’s relations with the wider world.

As this edition of the bibliography helps to demonstrate, most of the public (and scholarly) interest in Burma over the past few years has been related to the country’s politics and economy, accounting for the large number of new works in those categories. This has included several edited works, with chapters provided by a range of noted Burma-watchers, covering such issues as the continuing political role of the armed forces, unresolved tensions with the ethnic minorities, the obstacles to further economic development and the growth of civil society. Also, the increased number of postgraduates working on Burma in Western countries has led to specialized studies on areas and issues that, until now, had rarely been subject to close examination.

Another factor has been the dramatic surge in foreign visitors to Burma, up from an estimated 310,000 in 2010 to more than three million in 2014.Estimates for 2015 range as high as five million.This has prompted the production of a large number of works that seem designed to cater mainly to tourists, businessmen and armchair travellers. They have included guide books, phrase books, cookery books, collections of photographs and personal accounts of visits to the country.

Type
Chapter
Information
Myanmar (Burma) since the 1988 Uprising
A Select Bibliography
, pp. xxxvii - xlvi
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
First published in: 2023

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