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      Quo Vadis Myanmar?: Military Rule, the 2010 Election and Beyond

      Journal of International Studies
      UUM Press

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          Abstract

          Myanmar (or formerly Burma) has been ruled by the military (tatmadaw) since 1962 and although multiparty elections were held in 1990, the Myanmar military junta simply refused to accept the results and transfer power to the National League Democracy (NLD) that won with a landslide victory. Instead, the Myanmar military junta announced its own version of political reform through the introduction of a “disciplined democracy” and as such convened a National Convention for the purpose of drafting a new constitution for the country. The constitution was finally approved in 2008 through a referendum that was highly rigged. Based on provisions of the 2008 Constitution, the military junta held another round of multiparty elections on 7 November 2010. Taking stock of events since 1988 and in the light of recent developments, this paper therefore attempts to gauge the future direction of the country’s political landscape by interpreting and analyzing recent events. More importantly, it would attempt to show how much change can be expected in Myanmar especially when taking into account a flawed Constitution, a highly rigged elections and a new pseudo-civilian government. In other words, is there going to be real political change or are the elections a mere window dressing by the country’s military junta?  

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Malaysia
          Journal
          Journal of International Studies
          UUM Press
          January 06 2020
          : 7
          : 17-32
          Article
          10.32890/jis.7.2011.7915
          4262a307-24c2-4e8a-9524-80a614027038

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          History

          International economics & Trade,Labor & Demographic economics,Public economics,Quantitative finance,Political economics

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