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Informationen zum Autor Pak Nung Wong (D.Phil Oxon ) teaches politics and international relations at the Department of Politics, Languages and International Studies, University of Bath, United Kingdom. His books include: Decolonizing Global Intelligence: Emerging Intelligence Trends and the Practice of Inclusive Statecraft (2026), Techno-Geopolitics: US-China Tech War and the Practice of Digital Statecraft (2022), Logic of the Powers: Towards an Impact-driven Practice of Futurist Statecraft (2022), Destined Statecraft: Eurasian Small Power Politics and Strategic Cultures in Geopolitical Shifts (2018); Discerning the Powers in Post-Colonial Africa and Asia: A Treatise on Christian Statecraft (2016). He is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of the peer-reviewed journal, Bandung: Journal of the Global South . His research interests are statecraft and geopolitics in the Indo-Pacific region. Klappentext In 'Post-Colonial Statecraft in South East Asia'! an historically aware ethnography of the region and the first study of its kind! Pak Nung Wong maps out the complex interweaving power structures of the tribal rulers in the northern regions of the Philippines. Vorwort In 'Post-Colonial Statecraft in South East Asia', an historically aware ethnography of the region and the first study of its kind, Pak Nung Wong maps out the complex interweaving power structures of the tribal rulers in the northern regions of the Philippines. Zusammenfassung An incisive and historically informed ethnography of the region which explores the complex interweaving power structures of the tribal rulers in the northern regions of the Philippines. Inhaltsverzeichnis ContentsList of IllustrationsList of MapsList of TablesList of Figures and BoxesList of AbbreviationsGlossaryNotes on Transliteration and CurrencyAbout the BookPreface1. Introduction: Toward an Approach of Post-colonial Statecraft in Southeast Asia.2.Landscape of the Rhizomes: Cagayan Valley, 1972-20093. Localising Sovereignty: Contours of a Reflexive Sociology of Post-colonial Statecraft in Southeast Asia.4. Capillaries of the State: The Padrino (Power/Knowledge) System.5. Sovereignty Re-enacted: Phillipine Art for Governing African Coups.6. Sovereignty Policed: Disciplinary and Surveillance Techniques in the Itawes Phillipines.7. Exceptional Democracy: Conceiving Phillipine Elections as a Sovereignty-making Pinball Machine.8. Sovereignty Deflected: Discursive Resistance to State Justice.9. Conclusion: The Frontiers Revisited. NotesBibliographyIndex....
About the author
Pak Nung Wong (D.Phil Oxon) teaches politics and international relations at the Department of Politics, Languages and International Studies, University of Bath, United Kingdom. His books include: Decolonizing Global Intelligence: Emerging Intelligence Trends and the Practice of Inclusive Statecraft (2026), Techno-Geopolitics: US-China Tech War and the Practice of Digital Statecraft (2022), Logic of the Powers: Towards an Impact-driven Practice of Futurist Statecraft (2022), Destined Statecraft: Eurasian Small Power Politics and Strategic Cultures in Geopolitical Shifts (2018); Discerning the Powers in Post-Colonial Africa and Asia: A Treatise on Christian Statecraft (2016). He is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of the peer-reviewed journal, Bandung: Journal of the Global South. His research interests are statecraft and geopolitics in the Indo-Pacific region.