Abstract

The Handbook of Contemporary Cambodia. Edited by Katherine Brickell and Simon Springer. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2016. Hardcover: 496pp. No other book better depicts the country's here and now than The Handbook of Contemporary Cambodia. By avoiding the usual--and often simplistic--Western-centric narratives of the country's development challenges, this volume presents a first-rate account of current Cambodian society. Although both editors come from a geography background, their book provides a unique and well-rounded insight into the country's current situation, primarily because of their engagement with international and local academics, development professionals and activists. As is made clear in the introduction, the traumatic Khmer Rouge era provides only a partial explanation of the forces that have shaped contemporary Cambodia. The country has been haunted by its submissive position as a recipient of development aid, problematic relations with its nearest neighbours Vietnam and Thailand, and its dependence on China since the coup of 1997. The 2013 elections raised hopes that Prime Minister Hun Sen's ruling Cambodian People's Party (CPP)'s by would be overturned. But after the CPP's narrow-margin victory ensured that the old elites continued to hold power, the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) refused to attend parliament, resulting in months of political instability. The subsequent fragile peace between the ruling and opposition parties has been characterized by too many painful compromises. The Handbook of Contemporary Cambodia helps readers understand the country's complex facets by dividing them into five sections: political and economic tensions; rural developments; urban conflicts; social processes; and cultural currents. These five themes reflect entangled social realities that can be both sources of optimism and pessimism regarding the country's future. Catherine Morris' chapter on Justice, Law and Human Rights, for example, provides a legal backdrop to the current political situation. When the traditional system of dispute resolution was disrupted during the violence of the 1970s and 1980s, alternatives provided under pressure from foreign donors, such as law reforms and legal training for lawyers and judges, proved much less effective. Given the environment of heightened neopatrimonialism, attempts to establish the rule of law were undermined by the CPP and powerful elites who utilized the law for their own benefit. While many Cambodians and foreign observers remain sceptical about the opposition CNRP's ability to offer solutions to the country's many socioeconomic challenges, civil society receives high praise from international organizations and donors. Acknowledging the increasing number of attacks on activists, Louise Coventry's chapter offers a less romanticized view of Cambodia's civic engagement. Coventry shows how wider civil society has been overshadowed by an ever-growing number of NGOs backed by powerful donors that often cast aside more embedded, more traditional and likely more effective community-based organizations (CBOs). In making a connection between evolutions, concepts and spaces that are usually analyzed separately, this edited book also shows Cambodia as a country of blurring boundaries. This is, for example, apparent in the merging of boundaries between the village and city. …

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