LEADER 03822 am 2200637 n 450 001 9910279592303321 005 20180215 010 $a2-9564470-8-4 024 7 $a10.4000/books.irasec.632 035 $a(CKB)4100000004910760 035 $a(FrMaCLE)OB-irasec-632 035 $a(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/45649 035 $a(PPN)230000002 035 $a(EXLCZ)994100000004910760 100 $a20180703j|||||||| ||| 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $auu||||||m|||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 10$aEast-Timor $eHow to Build a New Nation in Southeast Asia in the 21st Century? /$fFrédéric Durand, Christine Cabasset-Semedo 210 $aBangkok $cInstitut de recherche sur l?Asie du Sud-Est contemporaine$d2018 215 $a1 online resource (304 p.) 330 $aThis book is the direct outcome of a panel on Timor-Leste entitled «How to build a new nation?» and organized in September 2007 in the framework of the EUROSEAS Congress in Naples. Among the more than 40 panels held, Timor-Leste's had been remarkably dense, with 20 presentations given by American, Australian, Brazilian, East-Timorese, French, German, Portuguese and Spanish researchers. At the time of this congress, the major event of 2006, which two years after continued to be called ?the crisis?, was still foremost in people's minds, conversations, and researches. While other events or forewarning episodes had taken place before that date, no doubt that the crisis of 2006/2007 had finally prove to be a turning point, for the country itself, and maybe even more so for international actors. Though presented at first as a United Nations' success story, especially when the territory was under UN management from October 1999 (withdrawal of the Indonesian army) until 20 May 2002 (independence of the country), the unity of Timor-Leste was then in peril, deceiving the expectations that had prevailed during the resistance years. Its climax was the conflict between ?those from the West? and ?those from the East? (?Loromonu-Lorosae? or Firaku-Kaladi), and a violence which caused a wave of internal refugees (around 150,000 IDP- Internally Displaced People). Beyond the causes and effects of this political and military crisis which had then spread to civil society, the ?crisis? had also directly or indirectly revealed a certain number of dysfunctions, notably the deficiencies of the UN preparations of independence and of the capacity of East Timorese governing bodies to manage and organize the country. 606 $aNation-building$zTimor-Leste 606 $aNationalism$zTimor-Leste 607 $aTimor-Leste$xPolitics and government$y2002- 610 $anation building 610 $asociety 610 $aEast-Timor 610 $aIndependence 610 $aIndonesia 615 0$aNation-building 615 0$aNationalism 676 $a320.95987 700 $aAquino Siapno$b Jacqueline$01322626 701 $aCabasset-Semedo$b Christine$01238364 701 $aCanas Mendes$b Nuno$01322627 701 $aCastro Seixas$b Paulo$01322628 701 $aDurand$b Frédéric$0458909 701 $aGonzalez Devant$b Sara$01322629 701 $aGraça Feijó$b Rui$01322630 701 $aHicks$b David$0396352 701 $aLoch$b Alexander$01322631 701 $aSachse$b Henriette$01322632 701 $aSchenk$b Christine$01322633 701 $aSilva$b Kelly$01322634 701 $aSousa$b Lúcio$01322635 701 $aDurand$b Frédéric$0458909 701 $aCabasset-Semedo$b Christine$01238364 712 02$aIRASEC. 801 0$bFR-FrMaCLE 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910279592303321 996 $aEast-Timor$93035135 997 $aUNINA