Myanmar's foreign policy responses to Western sanctions
Under military rule between 1988 and 2011, Myanmar was subject to opprobrium and sanctions from Western countries due to its domestic politics and human rights situation. The sanctions, incremental over a period of 23 years, were intended to push the military junta to improve it...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-650172020-11-01T08:21:13Z Myanmar's foreign policy responses to Western sanctions Kyaw San Wai Tan See Seng S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies DRNTU::Business::International business::Policy Under military rule between 1988 and 2011, Myanmar was subject to opprobrium and sanctions from Western countries due to its domestic politics and human rights situation. The sanctions, incremental over a period of 23 years, were intended to push the military junta to improve its treatment of the country's dissidents and minorities, and transfer also to power along the annulled outcome of a general election held in 1990. Despite such punitive measures, the military junta was overall defiant towards the West 's demands and continued its repressive grip on power. This was in part due to the regime's utilization of foreign policy to counter the effects of Western criticism and sanctions. These responses rested on reaching out to alternate big-power patrons such as China and Russia, small and medium sized friends within and beyond the region as in the case of Thailand, Singapore and North Korea, and its engagement with multilateral platforms, notably the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (A SEAN). This sheds light not only on Myanmar's specific case of how it responded to Western sanctions, but also on how a state faced with international sanctions might attempt to circumvent such punitive measures by reaching out for third-party sanction busters in securing diplomatic support, economic opportunities and access to arms. Master of Science (International Relations) 2015-06-10T06:33:46Z 2015-06-10T06:33:46Z 2014 2014 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/65017 en 63 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Business::International business::Policy Kyaw San Wai Myanmar's foreign policy responses to Western sanctions |
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Under military rule between 1988 and 2011, Myanmar was subject to opprobrium and
sanctions from Western countries due to its domestic politics and human rights situation.
The sanctions, incremental over a period of 23 years, were intended to push the military
junta to improve its treatment of the country's dissidents and minorities, and transfer
also to power along the annulled outcome of a general election held in 1990. Despite
such punitive measures, the military junta was overall defiant towards the West 's
demands and continued its repressive grip on power. This was in part due to the
regime's utilization of foreign policy to counter the effects of Western criticism and
sanctions. These responses rested on reaching out to alternate big-power patrons such
as China and Russia, small and medium sized friends within and beyond the region as in
the case of Thailand, Singapore and North Korea, and its engagement with multilateral
platforms, notably the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (A SEAN). This sheds light
not only on Myanmar's specific case of how it responded to Western sanctions, but also
on how a state faced with international sanctions might attempt to circumvent such
punitive measures by reaching out for third-party sanction busters in securing
diplomatic support, economic opportunities and access to arms. |
author2 |
Tan See Seng |
author_facet |
Tan See Seng Kyaw San Wai |
format |
Theses and Dissertations |
author |
Kyaw San Wai |
author_sort |
Kyaw San Wai |
title |
Myanmar's foreign policy responses to Western sanctions |
title_short |
Myanmar's foreign policy responses to Western sanctions |
title_full |
Myanmar's foreign policy responses to Western sanctions |
title_fullStr |
Myanmar's foreign policy responses to Western sanctions |
title_full_unstemmed |
Myanmar's foreign policy responses to Western sanctions |
title_sort |
myanmar's foreign policy responses to western sanctions |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/65017 |
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1683493722783744000 |