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Muslim Thai Bibliography

7.8. Gender

Amirell, S. (2011).  The Blessings and Perils of Female Rule: New Perspectives on the Reigning Queens of Patani, c. 1584–1718. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 42(2), 303–323.

Amirell, S. (2015).  Female Rule in the Indian Ocean World (1300–1900). Journal of World History, 26(3), 443–489.

Amporn Marddent. (2007).  Gendering Piety of Muslim Women in Thailand. Silapatsamnuk, 7(19), 37–43.

Amporn Marddent. (2016).  Gender Piety of Muslim Women in Thailand. (Ph.D.). Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main.

Amporn Marddent. (2019).  Religious Discourse and Gender Security in Southern Thailand. Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies, 12(2), 225–247.

Bradley, F. R. (2021).  Women, Violence, and Gender Dynamics during and after the Five Patani-Siam Wars, 1785–1838. Itinerario, 1–19. 🔗

Guelden, M. (2002).  Celestial Discourse: Female Spirit Mediums Channel Gendered Communication in Modernizing Southern Thailand. Paper presented at The First Inter-Dialogue Conference on Southern Thailand, Pattani. 🔗

Horstmann, A. (2005).  Mothers Behind? Women, Tablighi Jemaat al-Dahwa in South Thailand and the Introduction of New Gender Segregation. Paper presented at Gender and Islam in Southeast Asia, University of Passau. 🔗

Horstmann, A. (2013).  Female Missionaries and Women’s Participation in Southern Thailand’s Chapter of the Tablighi Jama’at. In S. Schroeter (Ed.), Gender and Islam in Southeast Asia (pp. 223–240). Leiden: Brill.

Jitlada Piriyasart, Praneed Songwathana, & Susan Kools. (2018).  Perceptions of Sexual Abstinence among Muslim Adolescent Girls in Southern Thailand. International Journal of Adolescent Medicine and Health, 32(3), 1–8. 🔗

Merli, C. (2008).  Sunat for Girls in Southern Thailand: Its Relation to Traditional Midwifery, Male Circumcision and Other Obstetrical Practices. Finnish Journal of Ethnicity and Migration, 3(2), 32–41. 🔗

Merli, C. (2010).  Male and Female Genital Cutting among Southern Thailand’s Muslims: Rituals, Biomedical Practice and Local Discourses. Culture, Health & Sexuality, 1–14. 🔗

Merli, C. (2012).  Negotiating Female Genital Cutting (Sunat) in Southern Thailand. In C. Raghavan & J. Levine (Eds.), Self-Determination and Women’s Rights in Muslim Societies (pp. 169–187). Waltham: Brandeis University Press.

Nishii, R. (1999).  Gender and Religion: Muslim-Buddhist Relationship on the West Coast in Southern Thailand. Paper presented at Seventh International Conference on Thai Studies, Amsterdam.

Nishii, R. (2003).  Gender Moralities and Religious Discourses. Paper presented at First International Conference on Southeast Asian Studies, Mahidol University, Nakhon Pathom.

Nishii, R. (2004a).  Managing Morality: Religion and Gender in the Area of Muslim-Buddhist Co-residence in Southern Thailand. Paper presented at Cultural Studies and the Construction of Knowledge in Thai Society, Chiang Mai University.

Nishii, R. (2004b).  Moral Discourse and Gender in Southern Thailand. Paper presented at Thinking Malayness, ILCAA, Tokyo.

Streicher, R. (2013).  Gendering Counterinsurgency in South Thailand. (Ph.D.). Freie Universität Berlin.

Streicher, R. (2014).  Checkpoints and the Gendered Policing of ‘Civilised’ Nation-State Boundaries in Southern Thailand. In J. Bachmann et al. (Eds.), War, Police and Assemblages of Intervention. London: Routledge.

Tsuneda, M. (2006).  Gendered Crossings: Gender and Migration in Muslim Communities in Thailand’s Southern Border Region. Kyoto Review of Southeast Asia. 🔗

Tsuneda, M. (2009).  Navigating Life on the Border: Gender, Marriage, and Identity in Malay Muslim Communities in Southern Thailand. (Ph.D.). University of Wisconsin–Madison.

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