1st Edition

Ontological Security and Status-Seeking Thailand’s Proactive Behaviours during the Second World War

By Peera Charoenvattananukul Copyright 2020
    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    How and why was it possible for a small state such as Thailand to challenge great powers France and Japan during the Second World War?

    Putting ontological security theory into dialogue with status seeking approaches, Charoenvattananukul uses a case study of Thailand in the early 1940s to interrogate the dynamics and logic of a small state foreign policy. During this period, Thailand’s foreign policy can appear to be surprising, if viewed through a lens of survival imperatives which would assume that passivity towards more powerful states is the optimal policy. As the majority of states are small- and medium-sized it is very important to understand the imperatives that drive such states, especially in their interactions with great powers.

    In applying these frameworks to a small state, this book makes a unique and valuable contribution to the field of international relations theory. It will also be of great interest to scholars of twentieth century Thai history and of the Pacific Theatre of the Second World War.

    List of Figures
    List of Abbreviations
    Acknowledgements
    Note on Names and Transcription

    PART I: INTRODUCTION AND THEORY 
    1. CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 
    2. CHAPTER 2 ONTOLOGICAL SECURITY, STIGMATISATION, TRAUMA, AND STATUS 

    PART II: THE ORIGINS OF THAILAND’S SENSE OF ONTOLOGICAL INSECURITY 
    3. CHAPTER 3 LATECOMER: SIAM AND THE QUEST FOR CIVILISATION 
    4. CHAPTER 4 INTEREST, STATUS ANXIETY, AND STATUS SEEKING 

    PART III: THAILAND’S TWO GAMBITS 
    5. CHAPTER 5 BEATING GOLIATH FOR PRESTIGE: THAILAND’S WAR WITH FRANCE 
    6. CHAPTER 6 ALLIANCE ANXIETY: THAILAND’S SEARCH FOR RECOGNITION FROM JAPAN 
    7. CHAPTER 7 CONCLUSION 

    Index

    Biography

    Peera Charoenvattananukul is a lecturer in the Department of International Affairs at the Faculty of Political Science, Thammasat University, Thailand