Public Policy Center, University of Nebraska
Date of this Version
6-11-2020
Citation
Published in Civil Wars 22:2-3 (2020), pp 379–421
doi:10.1080/13698249.2020.1765541
Abstract
Since 2004, close to 7,000 people have died in Thailand’s domestic insurgency in its three Muslim-majority southern provinces, one of the longest-running, low-intensity conflicts in Southeast Asia. This study assesses perceptions of human security threats in the area among a sample of students, their parents, and teachers of Islamic private schools (n = 427, n = 331, n = 51, respectively), and how they relate to perceptions of government actors and other community institutions. Questionnaire items were drawn from the World Values Survey Wave 6. Focus groups and interviews were also conducted to deepen our understanding of conflict related dynamics.
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Comments
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