Forgotten Country (New York, Aus 20,1990)

An article entitled “Forgotten Country” by Stan Sesser from the New Yorker magazine, August 20, 1990, concerning Laos and Vietnam.

American at Work in Thailand

A United States Information Service (USIS) interview with Lucien M. Hanks about working in Thailand, broadcast on Friday July 2, 1954, Public Relations Dept. Experimental Station.

Report of a field trip to north, Thailand, 1963

Report of a field trip to northern Thailand between 8-31 August 1963 aimed at selecting a location for carrying out anthropological fieldwork and gathering initial information on working conditions with a view to planning later work. This survey took place in Chiang Dao, Plao, Mae Chan, Tak, Phrae and Nan.

Proposal for an Anthropological Survey of Hill Region in Southeast Asia

Intended primarily as a means to collect information for anthropological science, this survey may also be of interest to national governments concerned with the welfare of hill-dwelling people. The relative obscurity of peoples living in the hill regions stretching from the Pacific Ocean to the eastern borders of India have made them of particular interest to anthropologists. This survey focuses on questions including whether these tribal people are being absorbed into the national majority populations of the countries in which they live, the extent to which these people are maintaining their tribal life, whether tribal movements can be constructed for a region, and whether present tribal movements reflect historical ones.

Proposal for a 1974 Survey in Chiangrai Province

Following surveys in 1964 and 1969 of villages with diverse ethnic populations in the Mae Kok uplands of northern Thailand, Lucien Hanks proposed to return for a third survey, occasioned by changes made evident by comparing the 1964 findings with those of 1969, including increased population, the number of villages, the movement of villages, loss of forest cover, and contacts with both the Thai population and government.

Ontology of Rice Reflection

Article by Jane R. Hanks in 1960 in Education About Asia Journal, vol. 9, no.3, 2004

Change comes to Anwang

Article by George Orick, published in the Ford Foundation Report, vol.23 no.4, 1992. Anwang located in China’s Yunnan Province, where 94% of the area is mountainous, Anwang is a remote rural region. The government has reached out to encourage far-reaching changes in the area’s traditional subsistence farming methods, describing these changes as “poverty alleviation”. Anwang was established by minority people driven to marginal land by the expanding Han majority. Some villagers have begun to think of marketing tiny food surpluses outside the village. However, Anwang’s people are uneducated and remain geographically isolated. Although the village now has a road, there is as yet no electricity. The main impetus for change in recent times was the abolition in 1982 of communes and their replacement by township governments charged with establishing a “responsibility system” of land tenure.

Ontology of Rice

Reflections on the Ontology of Rice Article by Jane R. Hanks from 1960 concerning a small rice-growing community in central Thailand, which has developed rituals associated with every step of growing the grain. Such rituals are monopolized by women, while the men do ordinary field work and rites, thus leaving women to assume such important roles. Thai people believe that living things contain a khwan, or spirit, which is indestructible. Initially sustained by breast milk from women, the khwan is then sustained by rice. Farmers believe that the whole of nature is protected by female guardian spirits.

Preliminary Report on Upland Villagers from the Valley of the Mea Kok to the Burma Border

July 1974 - This report deals primarily with data gathered by the Bennington-Cornell Survey of Hill Tribes from December 1973 to may 1974, mainly in the hills of Chiang Rai province. The Survey also gathered data on the same region in 1964 and 1969, and includes data concerning general observations and problems in the region.