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The Mekong River and the Struggle for Indochina Water, War, and Peace
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Book Code: C6137
ISBN: 0-275-96137-0
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-96137-4
280 pages, maps, photographs
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 1/30/1999
List Price: $79.95 (UK Sterling Price: £44.95)
Availability: Print on demand
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • The book has extensive and informative footnotes, and a selected bibliography. It will be useful to advanced undergradutes and graduate students and to a well-read public.
    —Choice
  • Described as an examination of the symbolic, environmental, political and economic importance of the great Mekong River and its basin back through history to the earliest days of man.
    —Indochina Chronology
  • Scholars and researchers interested in Southeast Asian history and economic development, environmental history, and rural sociology will find this an important study.
    —The Asian Reporter
  • [T]he author has pieced together a nuanced discussion of the historical progress of the Mekong project.
    —Asian Affairs
  • Her thoroughly researched and clearly written study provides important details on a number of projects and an astute assessment of the extent to which Mekong development programs have affected Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam.
    —American Historical Review
  • Students and scholars who want to make a case for alternatives to the nation-state or those who want to understand global implications of development in the region will find useful analysis in this work.
    —JAAS
Description: The Mekong River links together the mainland countries of Southeast Asia in a vital geographic, but also economic and political, unit. Its historical trajectory coursed through kingdoms and colonies, and its physical presence and symbolism became more acute as it came closer to modern times. Tracing the history of the Mekong River, this book shows how its conceptualizations have been transformed in modern times, and particularly during the Vietnam War when the Mekong River and Mekong Project became political pawns. In the 1950s, the decision was made to develop the river's resources to foster economic development for the four countries of the lower Mekong basin. The Mekong Project, as it came to be known, proposed the construction of a set of major dams on the mainstream and of numerous smaller ones on the tributaries to bring hydropower, flood control, irrigation, and other benefits to the riparian countries. The Project, however, was subverted to the needs of the Vietnam War. With the return of peace, the Mekong countries can re-examine the future of the river and its potential impact on the region. Nguyen concludes by examining the continuation of some of the Project's schemes by the independent Southeast Asian countries and regional powers. Scholars and researchers interested in Southeast Asian history and economic development, environmental history, and rural sociology will find this an important study.
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction
  • Water
  • The Mekong River in Pre-colonial and Colonial History
  • War
  • The Mekong River in the Indochina Wars
  • President Johnson's Mekong Enterprise
  • From War to Peace
  • And Peace
  • The Greater Mekong Region
  • Epilogue
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Index
LC Card Number: 97-49488
LCC Class: HD1698
Dewey Class: 333
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