Interlocking Elites in Southeast Asia

2003 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 249-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Case

AbstractAnalysts make much of the diversity of Southeast Asia's political regimes. However, the region also displays a mounting preponderance of pseudoand fuller democracies, as well as a common mode of transition where fuller democratization has taken place. This analysis argues that these "intermediate" regime categories can be partly ascribed to common, though countervailing factors of colonial legacies, structural forces, some faint cultural residues, and new globalized influences. Next, it explores the conditions in which changes may take place from pseudo-democracy to more fully democratic outcomes. Analysis turns finally to the ways in which despite this weakening of leadership, elites regain enough vitality that while transitions may go forward, they have been able to collaborate in limiting the quality of the new democracies that have emerged.

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 1496-1505
Author(s):  
Hartati R ◽  
Insanu M ◽  
Mudrika S. N. ◽  
Fidrianny I

The lemon plant (Citrus limon L.) is a species from the Rutaceae family that spread from Southeast Asia and spread to all countries in the world. Lemon has been used traditionally since ancient times to treat various diseases and has been tested for various pharmacological activities. The literature review was carried out to study the phytochemical compounds and pharmacological activities of lemon plants. The literature compiled by a minimum of 50 scientific articles using search engines such as Science Direct, Pubmed, and Google Scholar, published for a maximum of the last 10 years, includes a minimum of 20 articles in the last 2 years, has a DOI, and the quality of the journal index is reviewed using Scimago. Lemon is very rich in phytochemical compounds, including flavanones such as hesperidin, eriocytrin, naringin, narirutin, didymin; flavones such as apigenin, luteolin, and diosmin; flavonols such as routine, quercetin, mirisetin, isositrol, limositrol, and limositrin; terpenoids such as limonene, limonoids, and carotenoids. Various kinds of in vivo and in vitro studies provide results of various pharmacological activities such as antioxidants, anticancer, neuroprotective, antimicrobial, antidiabetic, anti-inflammatory, antihyperlipidemic, antiurolithiasis, and antiplasmodial. It is necessary to develop further research on the pharmacological activity of lemon plants in the future.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tilmann HEIL

This paper enquires into the role of multilingual practices in conviviality in shared, socially and culturally mixed localities. I ask how Casamançais use diverse repertoires to get by in everyday life in both Casamance, Senegal and Catalonia, Spain. The concept of conviviality stresses fragile, dynamic processes characteristic of everyday ways of living together with maintained difference. I argue that minimal, but diversified language practices, which compose linguistically diverse repertoires, are central in facilitating conviviality among local residents. Minimal interactions and ‘small talk’, or phatic communion, cushion potentially conflictual socio-cultural differences and inequalities. Firstly, I will evaluate discourses on multilingual practices of Casamançais in both contexts. Second, I will critically explore the reasons for and quality of the widespread use of diverse repertoires. I conclude that multilingual practices facilitate phatic communion sometimes playfully and sometimes as part of coping strategies in situations in which structural forces determine which choices will be more successful than others. The process of conviviality spans both these aspects describing ever-dynamic and ever-fragile ways of living with difference.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Murat Seyran ◽  
Sk Sarif Hassan ◽  
Vladimir N. Uversky ◽  
Pabitra Pal Choudhury ◽  
Bruce D. Uhal ◽  
...  

Phylogeny is a statistical approach displaying the evolutionary history of a genetically related group of organisms with the fundamental prerequisite of the utilization of a significant sample size that could represent the whole population under investigation. Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) phylogeny analyses are based on a single isolate of BatCoVs, which is not a sufficient representation of genetically related CoVs. For instance, the unique Bat-CoV RaTG13 sequence that is genetically associated with SARS-CoV-2 was isolated from Yunnan, China, in 2013. To date, no other RaTG13 sequence has been obtained in a different time (temporal), place (spatial), or other host condition. Data scarcity of Bat-CoVs sequences raises concern on the several fundamental experimental and biostatistical aspects, e.g. repeatability of the sequences and intraspecies variation of critical genes, such as the receptor-binding domain of Spike protein. Sunda pangolin has been proposed as the intermediate host and source of SARS-CoV-2, but no Pangolin-CoV isolates have been isolated in Southeast Asia, where Sunda pangolins inhabit. Most Pangolin-CoVs were isolated from deceased pangolins, that were captured during illegal animal trafficking into China, hence raising questions about the reliability and quality of such isolates. Pangolin-CoV sampling problems are also evident in the deposited sequences that are of sub-standard quality. Therefore, there is urgent need for survey the Bat-CoVs and possible intermediate hosts, such as pangolins and civets in Southeast Asia. These surveys are required to investigate the genomic source of SARS-CoV-2 and assess possible future risks for new outbreaks. The current SARS-CoV-2 phylogeny with unacceptably limited numbers of Bat-CoVs and Pangolin-CoVs sequences not sufficient and technically not appropriate for reliable phylogenic analysis.


Author(s):  
Sarimah Shaik-Abdullah ◽  
S. Kanageswari Suppiah Shanmugam ◽  
Mohan Chinnappan

The quality of education in any country rests on school communities as a whole. However, the real implementers of innovations and changes in curriculum are teachers. Teachers, as practitioners, are the ones most often held accountable for successes and failures in educating schoolchildren. The way to facilitate teachers in handling challenges and keeping up with curriculum renewals is through constant support in the form of continuing professional development (CPD) by means of action research. Action research as CPD has been viewed as a critical platform for advocating change, which is the outcome of teachers’ ability and autonomy to lead in making informed decisions about their own practices. Given its usefulness, action research is found well established, vastly practiced, and widely published in Western countries. This has raised the question of the widespread use of action research as CPD in the Southeast Asian (SEA) region. Preliminary analysis reveals that in some SEA countries, such as Timor Leste, there is limited literature on action research, while in countries such as Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand, action research has been well documented. At the same time, there is an emerging trend in SEA countries to adopt different models of action research. In Malaysia, for instance, action research has been primarily classroom based, whereas in Indonesia, a critical and community based approach to action research seems to be prevalent. This suggests that the kinds of action research conducted in the different SEA countries may reflect variations in cultural, economic, and geographical landscapes. Given the importance of action research to teacher practitioners and school leaders, and in providing an identity to the action research approaches conducted in Southeast Asia, the historical trail of action research presents a window into the nature of CPD concerns of each country, as well as the successes and challenges of conducting action research as CPD for sustained impact.


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