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‘The red seedlings’ of the Central Highlands: The social relatedness and political integration of selected ethnic minority groups in post-war Vietnam”

Nguyen, Huong LU (2014) Vietnam Update Conference
Abstract
Based on an ethnographic study among selected ethnic minority groups in Kon Tum province of the Central Highlands of Vietnam, this paper discusses how popular discourses about social-cultural differences between the ‘civilized’ lowland majority Kinh people and ‘backward’ upland minority groups impact on political participation of the local people. Popular assumptions contend that ethnic minorities are inept to learn, thus depriving themselves of higher education and training opportunities, eventually confining them to lowly local jobs rather than jobs of a more competitive nature. All this occurs against the backdrop of rapid economic, social and cultural transformations that reduce drastically the natural habitat of minority groups due to... (More)
Based on an ethnographic study among selected ethnic minority groups in Kon Tum province of the Central Highlands of Vietnam, this paper discusses how popular discourses about social-cultural differences between the ‘civilized’ lowland majority Kinh people and ‘backward’ upland minority groups impact on political participation of the local people. Popular assumptions contend that ethnic minorities are inept to learn, thus depriving themselves of higher education and training opportunities, eventually confining them to lowly local jobs rather than jobs of a more competitive nature. All this occurs against the backdrop of rapid economic, social and cultural transformations that reduce drastically the natural habitat of minority groups due to massive in-migration of Kinh people and the utilization of forest for production of commodities to serve the global market. A quarter of a century in the aftermath of Doi Moi, the realities on the ground show that state policies aimed at promoting social and cultural growth for the multi ethnic nation remains a myth. Particularly with regard to the social and political integration of ethnic minorities in the Central Highlands, the entrenched inequalities between the majority group and other minorities have become even wider and the few individuals from minority groups who have somehow climbed out of their own ethnic niches and succeed socially and economically are those who choose to adopt aspects of Viet/Kinh-ness. (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
unpublished
subject
conference name
Vietnam Update Conference
conference dates
2014-12-01 - 2014-12-02
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
66af008a-9fe1-4de5-9410-1b19479d6ca8 (old id 5148333)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 13:18:19
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:13:07
@misc{66af008a-9fe1-4de5-9410-1b19479d6ca8,
  abstract     = {{Based on an ethnographic study among selected ethnic minority groups in Kon Tum province of the Central Highlands of Vietnam, this paper discusses how popular discourses about social-cultural differences between the ‘civilized’ lowland majority Kinh people and ‘backward’ upland minority groups impact on political participation of the local people. Popular assumptions contend that ethnic minorities are inept to learn, thus depriving themselves of higher education and training opportunities, eventually confining them to lowly local jobs rather than jobs of a more competitive nature. All this occurs against the backdrop of rapid economic, social and cultural transformations that reduce drastically the natural habitat of minority groups due to massive in-migration of Kinh people and the utilization of forest for production of commodities to serve the global market. A quarter of a century in the aftermath of Doi Moi, the realities on the ground show that state policies aimed at promoting social and cultural growth for the multi ethnic nation remains a myth. Particularly with regard to the social and political integration of ethnic minorities in the Central Highlands, the entrenched inequalities between the majority group and other minorities have become even wider and the few individuals from minority groups who have somehow climbed out of their own ethnic niches and succeed socially and economically are those who choose to adopt aspects of Viet/Kinh-ness.}},
  author       = {{Nguyen, Huong}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{‘The red seedlings’ of the Central Highlands: The social relatedness and political integration of selected ethnic minority groups in post-war Vietnam”}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}