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Making Sense of Myanmar’s 1.2.21 Military Coup

Image via Asian Dynamics Initiative, University of Copenhagen

Image via Asian Dynamics Initiative, University of Copenhagen

On 8 November last year, Myanmar (also known as Burma) held a general election that returned Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy to power. But just as the new parliament was about to be convened on Monday, the army seized power, ostensibly for a year, alleging electoral irregularities.

How did this military putsch come to pass? What does the coup mean for Myanmar’s political future? Is this part of a wider authoritarian shift in politics across Asia, and indeed globally?

Join us for an academic discussion of the unfolding crisis.

Speakers will include Helene Maria Kyed (DIIS) and Stein Tønnesson (PRIO), both of whom have spent extended periods conducting research in Myanmar during recent years, along with political scientists Myat The Thitsar (UMass Lowell) and Matthew Walton (Toronto), who follow the country’s politics closely.

The event will be moderated by NIAS Director Duncan McCargo.

Register here.

Organizer: NIAS, ADI, University of Copenhagen, and the New York Southeast Asia Network, in collaboration with DIIS, PRIO, and Southeast Asia Student Initiative at Columbia.

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February 2

Book launch with Elizabeth Becker, author of ‘You Don't Belong Here: How Three Women Rewrote the Story of War’

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February 4

Artist Talk with Ho Tzu Nyen Featuring The Critical Dictionary of Southeast Asia