Praetorian Kingdom: A History of Military Ascendancy in Thailand
Who’s who in the Thai military? Why and how has the military evolved to enjoy the enormous power it continues to wield? Why have coups occurred? What is the future of the Thai military? Praetorian Kingdom: A History of Military Ascendancy in Thailand, published in August 2024 by ISEAS Publishing, Singapore, addresses these and other related questions. The book is a chronology of the armed forces in Thailand, from its founding as a permanent standing army in 1852 and service to the absolute monarchy, its martial dominance roughly from 1932 until 1973, reasserted power after 1976 until 1988/1992, backseat role in the 1992-2006 guided democracy, and reinvigorated sway since 2006. By 2024, Thailand had experienced 14 successful, overt military coups (depending on the definition of coup), and, despite currently being headed by a civilian Prime Minister, continues to possess a military which could stage a coup at any time. This book’s relevance is that it is one of the first works in English to focus attention on the history of a highly relevant Thai political actor responsible for changing multiple governments — the military. Readers of this book and those attending this talk will learn how the military evolved to be so powerful and its relations with civilian governments as well as direct ties with other governments (such as the United States) across time. The author will bring copies of the book which will be sold at discount prices.
About the speaker
Dr. Paul Chambers is Lecturer and Special Advisor on International Affairs at the Center of ASEAN Community Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, Naresuan University (Thailand). He is a Fellow at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (Singapore), the German-Southeast Asian Center of Excellence for Public Policy and Good Governance, and the Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace. He is also the executive editor of the Taylor & Francis (SCOPUS) journal Asian Affairs: An American Review. Aj. Paul has authored or co-authored over 100 publications. Recent works include Khaki Capital: The Political Economy of the Military in Southeast Asia (NIAS, 2017) and Praetorian Kingdom: A History of Military Ascendancy in Thailand (ISEAS, 2024). His research centers upon civil-military relations and international affairs in Southeast Asia, specifically Thailand.
When
Thursday, 23 January 2025 at 19:00
Where
Admission
Members and Students (to undergraduate level) — Free of charge
Non-Members — THB 300
For more information, please contact
To book your place, please contact Khun Pinthip at 02 661 6470-3 ext 203 or pinthip@thesiamsociety.org