Ratanakiri Province
Ratanakiri or Ratanak Kiri[3] (Khmer: រតនគិរី[4] IPA: [ˌreə̯̆ʔ taʔ ˈnaʔ ki ˈriː]), is a province of northeast Cambodia. It borders the provinces of Mondulkiri to the south and Stung Treng to the west and the countries of Laos and Vietnam to the north and east, respectively. The province extends from the mountains of the Annamite Range in the north, across a hilly plateau between the Tonle San and Tonle Srepok rivers, to tropical deciduous forests in the south. In recent years, logging and mining have scarred Ratanakiri's environment, long known for its beauty.
Ratanakiri Province រតនគិរី | |
---|---|
Ratanakiri countryside | |
Seal | |
Location of Ratanakiri in Cambodia | |
Coordinates: 13°44′N 107°0′E | |
Country | |
Established | 17 February 1959[1] |
Named for | Khmer: រតនៈ (gem) + គិរី (mountain) |
Capital | Banlung Municipality |
Government | |
• Governor | Thong Savon (CPP) |
Area | |
• Total | 10,782 km2 (4,163 sq mi) |
Area rank | 9th |
Population (2019)[2] | |
• Total | |
• Rank | 20th |
• Density | 19/km2 (50/sq mi) |
• Density rank | 21st |
Time zone | UTC+7 (ICT) |
Website | www |
For over a millennium, Ratanakiri has been occupied by the highland Khmer Loeu people, who are a minority elsewhere in Cambodia. During the region's early history, its Khmer Loeu inhabitants were exploited as slaves by neighboring empires. The slave trade economy ended during the French colonial era, but a harsh Khmerization campaign after Cambodia's independence again threatened Khmer Loeu ways of life. The Khmer Rouge built its headquarters in the province in the 1960s, and bombing during the Vietnam War devastated the region. Today, rapid development in the province is altering traditional ways of life.
Ratanakiri is sparsely populated; its 184,000 residents make up just over 1% of the country's total population. Residents generally live in villages of 20 to 60 families and engage in subsistence shifting agriculture. Ratanakiri is among the least developed provinces of Cambodia. Its infrastructure is poor, and the local government is weak. Health indicators in Ratanakiri are extremely poor; men's life expectancy is 39 years, and women's is 43 years. Education levels are also low, with just under half of the population illiterate.
History
Ratanakiri has been occupied since at least the Stone or Bronze Age, and trade between the region's highlanders and towns along the Gulf of Thailand dates to at least the 4th century A.D.[5] The region was invaded by Annamites, the Cham, the Khmer, and the Thai during its early history, but no empire ever brought the area under centralized control.[6] From the 13th century or earlier until the 19th century, highland villages were often raided by Khmer, Lao, and Thai slave traders.[7] The region was conquered by local Laotian rulers in the 18th century and then by the Thai in the 19th century.[8] The area was incorporated into French Indochina in 1893, and colonial rule replaced slave trading.[9] The French built huge rubber plantations, especially in Labansiek (present-day Banlung); indigenous workers were used for construction and rubber harvesting.[6] While under French control, the land comprising present-day Ratanakiri was transferred from Siam (Thailand) to Laos and then to Cambodia.[10] Although highland groups initially resisted their colonial rulers, by the end of the colonial era in 1953 they had been subdued.[9]
Ratanakiri Province was created in 1959 from land that had been the eastern area of Stung Treng Province.[6] The name Ratanakiri (រតនគិរី) is formed from the Khmer words រតនៈ (ratana "gem" from Sanskrit ratna) and គិរី (kiri "mountain" from Sanskrit giri), describing two features for which the province is known.[11] During the 1950s and 1960s, Norodom Sihanouk instituted a development and Khmerization campaign in northeast Cambodia that was designed to bring villages under government control, limit the influence of insurgents in the area, and "modernize" indigenous communities.[12] Some Khmer Loeu were forcibly moved to the lowlands to be educated in Khmer language and culture, ethnic Khmer from elsewhere in Cambodia were moved into the province, and roads and large rubber plantations were built.[13] After facing harsh working conditions and sometimes involuntary labor on the plantations, many Khmer Loeu left their traditional homes and moved farther from provincial towns.[14] In 1968, tensions led to an uprising by the Brao people in which several Khmer were killed.[15] The government responded harshly, torching settlements and killing hundreds of villagers.[15]
In the 1960s, the ascendant Khmer Rouge forged an alliance with ethnic minorities in Ratanakiri, exploiting Khmer Loeu resentment of the central government.[17] The Communist Party of Kampuchea headquarters was moved to Ratanakiri in 1966, and hundreds of Khmer Loeu joined CPK units.[18] During this period, there was also extensive Vietnamese activity in Ratanakiri.[19] Vietnamese communists had operated in Ratanakiri since the 1940s; at a June 1969 press conference, Sihanouk said that Ratanakiri was "practically North Vietnamese territory".[20] Between March 1969 and May 1970, the United States undertook a massive covert bombing campaign in the region, aiming to disrupt sanctuaries for communist Vietnamese troops. Villagers were forced outside of main towns to escape the bombings, foraging for food and living on the run with the Khmer Rouge.[21] In June 1970, the central government withdrew its troops from Ratanakiri, abandoning the area to Khmer Rouge control.[22] The Khmer Rouge regime, which had not initially been harsh in Ratanakiri, became increasingly oppressive.[23] The Khmer Loeu were forbidden from speaking their native languages or practicing their traditional customs and religion, which were seen as incompatible with communism.[24] Communal living became compulsory, and the province's few schools were closed.[25] Purges of ethnic minorities increased in frequency, and thousands of refugees fled to Vietnam and Laos.[26] Preliminary studies indicate that bodies accounting for approximately 5% of Ratanakiri's residents were deposited in mass graves, a significantly lower rate than elsewhere in Cambodia.[27]
After the Vietnamese defeated the Khmer Rouge in 1979, government policy toward Ratanakiri became one of benign neglect.[14] The Khmer Loeu were permitted to return to their traditional livelihoods, but the government provided little infrastructure in the province.[14] Under the Vietnamese, there was little contact between the provincial government and many local communities.[28] Long after the fall of the Khmer Rouge regime, however, Khmer Rouge rebels remained in the forests of Ratanakiri.[29] Rebels largely surrendered their arms in the 1990s, though attacks along provincial roads continued until 2002.[29]
Ratanakiri's recent history has been characterized by development and attendant challenges to traditional ways of life.[30] The national government has built roads, encouraged tourism and agriculture, and facilitated rapid immigration of lowland Khmers into Ratanakiri.[31] Road improvements and political stability have increased land prices, and land alienation in Ratanakiri has been a major problem.[32] Despite a 2001 law allowing indigenous communities to obtain collective title to traditional lands, some villages have been left nearly landless.[30] The national government has granted concessions over land traditionally possessed by Ratanakiri's indigenous peoples,[33] and even land "sales" have often involved bribes to officials, coercion, threats, or misinformation.[32] Following the involvement of several international non-governmental organizations (NGOs), land alienation had decreased in frequency as of 2006.[34] In the 2000s, Ratanakiri also received hundreds of Degar (Montagnard) refugees fleeing unrest in neighboring Vietnam; the Cambodian government was criticized for its forcible repatriation of many refugees.[35]
Geography and Climate
The geography of Ratanakiri Province is diverse, encompassing rolling hills, mountains, plateaus, lowland watersheds, and crater lakes.[36] Two major rivers, Tonle San and Tonle Srepok, flow from east to west across the province. The province is known for its lush forests; as of 1997, 70–80% of the province was forested, either with old-growth forest or with secondary forest regrown after shifting cultivation.[37] In the far north of the province are mountains of the Annamite Range; the area is characterized by dense broadleaf evergreen forests, relatively poor soil, and abundant wildlife.[38] In the highlands between Tonle San and Tonle Srepok, the home of the vast majority of Ratanakiri's population, a hilly basalt plateau provides fertile red soils.[38] Secondary forests dominate this region.[39] South of the Srepok River is a flat area of tropical deciduous forests.[38]
Like other areas of Cambodia, Ratanakiri has a monsoonal climate with a rainy season from June to October, a cool season from November to January, and a hot season from March to May.[40] Ratanakiri tends to be cooler than elsewhere in Cambodia.[40] The average daily high temperature in the province is 34.0 °C (93.2 °F), and the average daily low temperature is 22.1 °C (71.8 °F).[41] Annual precipitation is approximately 2,200 millimetres (87 in).[41] Flooding often occurs during the rainy season and has been exacerbated by the recently built Yali Falls Dam.[42]
Ratanakiri has some of the most biologically diverse lowland tropical rainforest and montane forest ecosystems in mainland Southeast Asia.[43] One 1996 survey of two sites in Ratanakiri and one site in neighboring Mondulkiri recorded 44 mammal species, 76 bird species, and 9 reptile species.[44] A 2007 survey of Ratanakiri's Virachey National Park recorded 30 ant species, 19 katydid species, 37 fish species, 35 reptile species, 26 amphibian species, and 15 mammal species, including several species never before observed.[45] Wildlife in Ratanakiri includes Asian elephants, gaur, and monkeys.[37] Ratanakiri is an important site for the conservation of endangered birds, including the giant ibis and the greater adjutant.[37] The province's forests contain a wide variety of flora; one half-hectare forest inventory identified 189 species of trees and 320 species of ground flora and saplings.[37]
Nearly half of Ratanakiri has been set aside in protected areas,[46] which include Lomphat Wildlife Sanctuary and Virachey National Park. Even these protected areas, however, are subject to illegal logging, poaching, and mineral extraction.[47] Though the province has been known for its relatively pristine environment, recent development has spawned environmental problems.[48] The unspoiled image of the province often conflicts with the reality on the ground: visitors "expecting to find pristine forests teeming with wildlife are increasingly disappointed to find lifeless patches of freshly cut tree stumps".[47] Land use patterns are changing as population growth has accelerated and agriculture and logging have intensified.[49] Soil erosion is increasing, and microclimates are being altered.[49] Habitat loss and unsustainable hunting have contributed to the province's decreasing biodiversity.[50]
Government and administrative divisions
Government in Ratanakiri is weak, largely due to the province's remoteness, ethnic diversity, and recent history of Khmer Rouge dominance.[51] The provincial legal framework is poor, and the rule of law is even weaker in Ratanakiri than elsewhere in Cambodia.[52] Furthermore, government services are ineffective and insufficient to meet the needs of the province.[53] The Cambodian government has traditionally accepted substantial support from NGOs in the region.[54]
Thon Saron is the provincial governor.[55] As of the 2017 communal elections, commune councils in Ratanakiri are composed of 207 members representing the CPP, 51 members representing the Cambodia National Rescue Party, and two members representing the Grassroots Democracy Party.[56] Political scientist Caroline Hughes has suggested that the CPP's overwhelming dominance in rural areas such as Ratanakiri stems from the central government's ability to suppress collective action, which in urban areas is offset by international donors and NGOs that provide support for opposition parties.[57] Fifty-one commune council members in Ratanakiri (20%) were women as of the 2012 communal elections, and 98% of Ratanakiri's government staff was Khmer as of 2006.[58] Bou Lam, a member of the CPP, represents Ratanakiri in the National Assembly of Cambodia.[59]
Village government in Ratanakiri has both traditional and administrative components. Traditional forms of government, namely village elders and other indigenous institutions, are dominant.[60] Members of each village designate one or more community elders to manage village affairs, mediate conflicts, and ensure that villagers follow customary laws, particularly about land and resource use.[61] Elders do not play an autocratic role, and are instead primarily respected advisors and consensus builders.[62] Village elders are generally male, but women also play a role in the management of the community and its resources.[63] A village may also have a village chief, i.e., a local government person who is appointed by a higher governmental official.[60] The village chief serves as a liaison between the village and outside government officials, but lacks traditional authority.[60] The role of the village chief in village governance may be poorly defined; in one Kreung village, residents told a researcher that they were "very unclear exactly what the work of the village chief entailed."[60]
The province is divided into eight districts and one municipality, as follows:[64][65]
District | Khmer | Communes | Population (2008) |
---|---|---|---|
Andoung Meas | ស្រុកអណ្ដូងមាស | Malik, Nhang, Ta Lav | 10,400 |
Banlung Municipality | ក្រុងបានលុង | Kachanh, Labansiek, Yeak Laom | 29,000 |
Bar Kaev | ស្រុកបរកែវ | Kak, Keh Chong, La Minh, Lung Khung, Saeng, Ting Chak | 20,000 |
Koun Mom | ស្រុកកូនមុំ | Serei Mongkol, Srae Angkrorng, Ta Ang, Teun, Trapeang Chres, Trapeang Kraham | 15,500 |
Lumphat | ស្រុកលំផាត់ | Chey Otdam, Ka Laeng, Lbang Muoy, Lbang Pir, Ba Tang, Seda | 19,000 |
Ou Chum | ស្រុកអូរជុំ | Cha Ung, Chan, Aekakpheap, Kalai, Ou Chum, Sameakki, L'ak | 18,000 |
Ou Ya Dav | ស្រុកអូរយ៉ាដាវ | Bar Kham, Lum Choar, Pak Nhai, Pate, Sesant, Saom Thum, Ya Tung | 16,400 |
Ta Veaeng | ស្រុកតាវែង | Ta Veaeng Leu, Ta Veaeng Kraom | 5,800 |
Veun Sai | ស្រុកវើនសៃ | Ban Pong, Hat Pak, Ka Choun, Kaoh Pang, Kaoh Peak, Kok Lak, Pa Kalan, Phnum Kok, Veun Sai | 16,400 |
Economy and transportation
The vast majority of workers in Ratanakiri are employed in agriculture.[66] Most of the indigenous residents of Ratanakiri are subsistence farmers, practicing slash and burn shifting cultivation. (See Culture below for more information on traditional subsistence practices.) Many families are beginning to shift production to cash crops such as cashews, mangoes, and tobacco, a trend that has accelerated in recent years.[67] Ratanakiri villagers have traditionally had little contact with the cash economy.[37] Barter exchange remains widespread, and Khmer Loeu villagers tended to visit markets only once per year until quite recently.[37] As of 2005, monetary income in the province averaged US$5 per month per person; purchased possessions such as motorcycles, televisions, and karaoke sets have become extremely desirable.[68]
Larger-scale agriculture occurs on rubber and cashew plantations.[69] Other economic activities in the province include gem mining and commercial logging. The most abundant gem in Ratanakiri is blue zircon. Small quantities of amethyst, peridot, and black opal are also produced.[70] Gems are generally mined using traditional methods, with individuals digging holes and tunnels and manually removing the gems; recently, however, commercial mining operations have been moving into the province.[71] Logging, particularly illegal logging, has been a problem both for environmental reasons and because of land alienation. This illegal logging has been undertaken by the Cambodian military and by Vietnamese loggers.[72] In 1997, an estimated 300,000 cubic meters of logs were exported illegally from Ratanakiri to Vietnam, compared to a legal limit of 36,000 cubic meters.[73] John Dennis, a researcher for the Asian Development Bank, described the logging in Ratanakiri as a "human rights emergency".[73]
Ratanakiri's tourist industry has rapidly expanded in recent years: visits to the province increased from 6,000 in 2002 to 105,000 in 2008 and 118,000 in 2011.[47][74] The region's tourism development strategy focuses on encouraging ecotourism.[75] Increasing tourism in Ratanakiri has been problematic because local communities receive very little income from tourism and because guides sometimes bring tourists to villages without residents' consent, disrupting traditional ways of life.[76] A few initiatives have sought to address these issues: a provincial tourism steering committee aims to ensure that tourism is non-destructive, and some programs provide English and tourism skills to indigenous people.[77]
Ox-cart and motorcycle are common means of transportation in Ratanakiri.[78] The provincial road system is better than in some parts of the country, but remains in somewhat bad condition.[79] National Road 78 between Banlung and the Vietnam border was built between 2007 and 2010; the road was expected to increase trade between Cambodia and Vietnam.[80] There is a small airport in Banlung,[81] but commercial flights to Ratanakiri have long been discontinued.[82][83]
Demographics and towns
As of 2013, Ratanakiri Province had a population of approximately 184,000.[84] Its population nearly doubled between 1998 and 2013, largely due to internal migration.[85] In 2013, Ratanakiri made up 1.3% of Cambodia's total population; its population density of 17.0 residents per square kilometer was just over one fifth the national average.[84] About 70% of the province's population lives in the highlands; of the other 30%, approximately half live in more urbanized towns, and half live along rivers and in the lowlands, where they practice wetland rice cultivation and engage in market activities.[37] Banlung, the provincial capital located in the central highlands, is by far the province's largest town, with a population of approximately 25,000.[86] Other significant towns include Veun Sai in the north and Lomphat in the south, with populations of 2,000 and 3,000 respectively.[87]
In 2013, 37% of Ratanakiri residents were under age 15, 52% were age 15 to 49, 7% were age 50 to 64, and 3% were aged 65 or older; 49.7% of residents were male, and 50.3% were female.[88] Each household had an average of 4.9 members, and most households (85.6%) were headed by men.[89]
While highland peoples have inhabited Ratanakiri for well over a millennium, lowland peoples have migrated to the province in the last 200 years.[37] As of 2013, various highland groups collectively called Khmer Loeu made up approximately half of Ratanakiri's population, ethnic Khmers made up 36%, and ethnic Lao made up 10%.[90] Within the Khmer Loeu population, 35% were Tampuan as of 1998, 24% were Jarai, 23% were Kreung, 11% were Brou, 3% were Kachok, and 3% were Kavet, with other groups making up the remaining one percent.[91] There are also very small Vietnamese, Cham, and Chinese minorities.[92][93][94] Though the official language of Ratanakiri (like all of Cambodia) is Khmer, each indigenous group speaks its own language.[95] Less than 10% of Ratanakiri's indigenous population can speak Khmer fluently.[96]
Health, education, and development
Health indicators in Ratanakiri are the worst in Cambodia.[97] Life expectancy is 39 years for men and 43 years for women.[94] Malaria, tuberculosis, intestinal parasites, cholera, diarrhea, and vaccine-preventable diseases are endemic.[97] Ratanakiri has very high rates of maternal and child mortality; in Ratanakiri and neighboring Mondulkiri (whose figures were combined in the most recent survey), over 10% of children die before the age of five.[98] Ratanakiri also has the country's highest rates of severe malnutrition.[99] Ratanakiri residents' poor health can be attributed to a variety of factors, including poverty, remoteness of villages, poor quality medical services, and language and cultural barriers that prevent Khmer Loeu from obtaining medical care.[100] The province has one referral hospital, 10 health centers, and 17 health posts.[101] Medical equipment and supplies are minimal, and most health facilities are staffed by nurses or midwives, who are often poorly trained and irregularly paid.[102]
As of 1998, Ratanakiri had 76 primary schools, one junior high school, and one high school.[103] Education levels, particularly among Khmer Loeu, are very low. A 2002 survey of residents in six villages found that fewer than 10% of respondents had attended any primary school.[104] Access to education is limited because of the expense of books, distance to schools, children's need to contribute to their families' livelihood, frequent absence of teachers, and instruction that is culturally inappropriate and in a language foreign to most students.[105] Only 55% of Ratanakiri adults were literate as of 2013 (compared to 80% in Cambodia overall).[106] Bilingual education initiatives, in which students begin instruction in native languages and gradually transition to instruction in Khmer, began in Ratanakiri in 2002 and appear to have been successful.[107] The programs aim to make education more accessible to speakers of indigenous languages, as well as to give Khmer Loeu access to national political and economic affairs by providing Khmer language skills.[96]
Ratanakiri is one of the least developed provinces in Cambodia.[53] As of 2013, the average home had 1.9 rooms, and only 14.9% of buildings in the province had permanent roofs, walls, and flooring.[108] Relatively few households (27.8%) had toilet facilities.[109] The largest share of households (38.0%) obtained water from springs, streams, ponds, or rain; much of the remainder obtained water from protected (23.9%) or unprotected (15.1%) dug wells.[110] Only 21.6% of Ratanakiri residents obtained water from sources that are considered safe (purchased water, piped water, or tube/piped wells).[111] Household water sources were within the home for 28.0% of households, near the home for 39.1%, and away from the home for 32.9%.[110] The most common source of light was battery power (39.5%), followed by government-provided power (25.5%), and kerosene (16.5%).[112] Most households (85%) used firewood as the main fuel for cooking.[113] A variety of NGOs, including Oxfam and Health Unlimited, work to improve health and living conditions in the province.[114]
Culture
Khmer Loeu typically practice subsistence slash and burn shifting cultivation in small villages of between 20 and 60 nuclear families.[115] Each village collectively owns and governs a forest territory whose boundaries are known though not marked.[116] Within this land, each family is allocated, on average, 1–2 hectares (2.5–5 acres) of actively cultivated land and 5–6 hectares (12.5–15 acres) of fallow land.[117] The ecologically sustainable cultivation cycle practiced by the Khmer Loeu generally lasts 10 to 15 years.[118] Villagers supplement their agricultural livelihood with low-intensity hunting, fishing, and gathering over a large area.[118]
Khmer Loeu diets in Ratanakiri are largely dictated by the food that is available for harvesting or gathering.[119] Numerous food taboos also limit food choice, particularly among pregnant women, children, and the sick.[120] The primary staple grain is rice, though most families experience rice shortages during the six months before harvest time.[121] Some families have begun to plant maize to alleviate this problem; other sources of grain include potatoes, cassava, and taro.[121] Most Khmer Loeu diets are low in protein, which is limited in availability.[122] Wild game and fish are major protein sources, and smaller animals such as rats, wild chickens, and insects are also sometimes eaten.[122] Domestic animals such as pigs, cows, and buffaloes are only eaten when sacrifices are made.[122] In the rainy season, many varieties of vegetables and leaves are gathered from the forest.[121] (Vegetables are generally not cultivated.[121]) Commonly eaten fruits include bananas, jackfruit, papayas, and mangoes.[123]
Houses in rural Ratanakiri are made from bamboo, rattan, wood, saek, and kanma leaves, all of which are collected from nearby forests; they typically last for around three years.[37] Village spatial organization varies by ethnic group.[63] Kreung villages are constructed in a circular manner, with houses facing inwards toward a central meeting house.[63] In Jarai villages, vast longhouses are inhabited by all extended families, with the inner house divided into smaller compartments.[63] Tampuan villages may follow either pattern.[63]
Nearly all Khmer Loeu are animist, and their cosmologies are intertwined with the natural world.[124] Some forests are believed to be inhabited by local spirits, and local taboos forbid cutting in those areas.[125] Within spirit forests, certain natural features such as rock formations, waterfalls, pools, and vegetation are sacred.[126] Major sacrificial festivals in Ratanakiri occur during March and April, when fields are selected and prepared for the new planting season.[127] Christian missionaries are present in the province, and some Khmer Loeu have converted to Christianity.[128] The region's ethnic Khmer are Buddhist.[129] There is also a small Muslim community, consisting mainly of ethnic Cham.[130]
Because of the province's high prevalence of malaria and its distance from regional centers, Ratanakiri was isolated from Western influences until the late 20th century.[39] Major cultural shifts have occurred in recent years however, particularly in villages near roads and district towns; these changes have been attributed to contact with internal immigrants, government officials, and NGO workers.[131] Clothing and diets are becoming more standardized, and traditional music is being displaced by Khmer music.[131] Many villagers have also observed a loss of respect for elders and a growing divide between the young and the old.[131] Young people have begun to refuse to abide by traditional rules and have stopped believing in spirits.[131]
References
Notes
- "History of Ratanakiri Province". ratanakiri.gov.kh (in Khmer). Ratanakiri Administration. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
- "General Population Census of the Kingdom of Cambodia 2019". National Institute of Statistics. Ministry of Planning. June 2019. Retrieved 12 August 2019.
- Ith Sotha.
- Alternative spellings include រតនៈគិរី, រតនគីរី, and រតនៈគីរី.
- "Settlement and agriculture in and adjacent to Virachey National Park", p. 5; Stark, p. 96.
- Indigenous Peoples: Ethnic Minorities and Poverty Reduction, pp. 6–7.
- Indigenous Peoples: Ethnic Minorities and Poverty Reduction, pp. 6–7; "Settlement and agriculture in and adjacent to Virachey National Park", p. 5.
- "International Boundary Study No. 32", p. 4.
- "Settlement and agriculture in and adjacent to Virachey National Park", p. 5.
- "International Boundary Study No. 32", p. 4; Stuart-Fox, p. 27.
- Fox, p. 115.; Headley et al., pp. 181, 1003; "Welcome to Ratnakiri".
- "Settlement and agriculture in and adjacent to Virachey National Park", p. 5; Sith Samath et al., p. 353; Vajpeyi, pp. 126–27.
- "Settlement and agriculture in and adjacent to Virachey National Park", p. 5; Sith Samath et al., p. 353; Vajpeyi, p. 126.
- Sith Samath et al., p. 353.
- Chandler, The Tragedy of Cambodian History, p. 174; Dommen, p. 618; Martin, p. 114.
- Clymer, p. 10.
- Becker, pp. 107–108; Chandler, Brother Number One, p. 176; Locard; Martin, p. 114.
- Chandler, Brother Number One, p. 75; Chandler, The Tragedy of Cambodian History, pp. 158, 175.
- Short, p. 171.
- Kissinger, p. 128; Short, p. 171.
- Clymer, p. 11; Sith Samath et al., p. 353; Vajpeyi, p. 127.
- "Settlement and agriculture in and adjacent to Virachey National Park", p. 5.; Sith Samath et al., p. 353.
- Becker, pp. 108, 251; "Settlement and agriculture in and adjacent to Virachey National Park", p. 5.
- Sith Samath et al., p. 353; Thomas, Anne et al., p. 239.
- Thomas, Anne et al., p. 239.
- Becker, p. 251; Vajpeyi, p. 127.
- Etcheson, p. 116.
- Sith Samath et al., "Addressing Anarchy", pp. 353–54.
- Suzuki, p. 11; Waldick.
- "Untangling the Web of Human Trafficking and Unsafe Migration in Cambodia and Lao PDR"; Vinding, The Indigenous World 2004, p. 256.
- Stidsen, p. 324; Tyler, p. 33; Vinding, The Indigenous World 2004, p. 256.
- Vinding, The Indigenous World 2004, p. 256.
- Hall et al., p. 76; Stidsen, p. 324; Tyler, p. 33; Vinding, The Indigenous World 2004, p. 256.
- Ashish Joshia Ingty John and Chea Phalla. "Community-based natural resource management and decentralized governance in Ratanakiri, Cambodia." In Tyler, p. 53.
- "Cambodia: Protect Montagnard Refugees Fleeing Vietnam"; Christie, pp. 162-63.
- "Welcome to Ratnakiri".
- Bann.
- Bann; Fox, p. 115.
- Fox, p. 115.
- "Climate".
- Men Sothy & Chhun Sokunth, p. 3.
- Japan Environmental Council, pp. 139–42; "Officials: Cambodia's Ratanakiri severely flooded, Mekong may burst banks"; "Yali Falls Dam: Impacts on Ratanakiri Province, Cambodia".
- Brown, Graeme, p. iv.
- Desai & Lic Vuthy.
- "Preliminary Report: Virachey National Park RAP 2007, Cambodia", pp. 5–6.
- Fox, p. 124; Poffenberger, ch. 4–5.
- Kurczy.
- Sith Samath et al., pp. 350–51.
- Sith Samath et al., p. 350.
- Poffenberger, ch. 4–5; Sith Samath et al., p. 351.
- Sith Samath et al., pp. 349, 356; Suzuki, pp. 12–13.
- Sith Samath et al., pp. 349, 356.
- Sith Samath et al., p. 351.
- Sith Samath et al., p. 351; Suzuki, p. 13.
- Ban Chork & Muny Sithyna.
- https://www.necelect.org.kh/khmer/content/2401
- Hughes, p. 80.
- Ashish Joshia Ingty John & Chea Phalla, "Community-based natural resource management and decentralized governance in Ratanakiri, Cambodia", in Tyler, p. 34; "Final assessment...", p. 79.
- Aun Pheap.
- Brown, Graeme, p. 11.
- Brown, Graeme, pp. 9–11.
- Brown, Graeme, p. 10.
- Brown, Graeme, p. 12.
- Rotanak Kiri Provincial Resources.
- "Annex 1", p. 85. Cambodia National Institute of Statistics. Accessed 21 July 2015.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 10...", p. 93.
- Levett; Suzuki, p. 10; "Untangling the Web of Human Trafficking and Unsafe Migration in Cambodia and Lao PDR".
- Suzuki, p. 10.
- "Rethinking Poverty Reduction" (Part I: An Overview of the Situation of Indigenous Minorities in Ratanakiri Archived 9 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine); 1999–2000 Ratanakiri Provincial Development Plan, p. 170 (PDF) Archived 22 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- Austin et al.
- "Bleak outlook for Cambodian gem diggers as mining firms move in"; Bou Saroeun and Phelim Kyne; Calvet ("Jóvenes pobres ..."); Dobbs.
- Dauvergne, pp. 119, 133; Kurczy.
- Dennis.
- "Municipality and Province Investment Information: Ratanakiri Province" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 July 2015. Retrieved 17 July 2015.
- Summers, Laura. "Economy [of Cambodia]". In The Far East and Asia, p. 251.
- Baird ("Shifting Contexts..."), p. 14; United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, pp. 29–30.
- Vinding, The Indigenous World 2002–2003, p. 268.
- Thomas, Amanda.
- Spooner, p. 19.
- Communist Party of Vietnam; Hun Sen; "Project Profile...", pp. 1–4; "Vietnamese-funded Highway".
- Palmer, p. 241
- Ray & Robinson, p. 334.
- Planet, Lonely; Ray, Nick; Bloom, Greg (July 2014). Lonely Planet Cambodia. google.com. ISBN 9781743600269.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 10...", p. 11.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 10...", pp. 11, 14-15; "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013 Final Report"; p. 17; Van den Berg & Phat Palith, p. 6.
- Ray & Robinson, p. 292.
- Ray & Robinson, pp. 296, 298.
- http://www.stat.go.jp/info/meetings/cambodia/pdf/c13ana03.pdf, p. 30.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 10...", pp. 15, 44.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 7...", pp. 16, 97. Language is used as proxy for ethnicity p. 6 (PDF) Archived 15 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- Cam Region Prelim Edit Archived 15 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 7...", p. 16.
- Van den Berg & Phat Palith, p. 6.
- Sau Sisovanna (2012). Masami Ishida (ed.). "The Cambodia Development Triangle Area" (PDF). Five Triangle Areas in the Greater Mekong Subregion. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 15 July 2015. p. 63, 65.
- Constitution of Cambodia, Article 5; Tyler, p. 34.
- Clayton, p. 104.
- Riddell, p. 258.
- Hubbel, p. 34; "Rattanakiri"; Riddell, p. 258; "2010 Cambodia Demographic and Health Survey Fact Sheet".
- Hamade, p. 3.
- Hubbel, pp. 34, 36; Riddell, p. 258.
- "Indigenous women working towards improved maternal health", p. 9.
- Brown, Ian, pp. 59–60; "Indigenous women working towards improved maternal health", p. 9.
- "1999–2000 Provincial Development Plan", p. 6.
- Chey Cham et al., p. 7.
- Hubbel, p. 36.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 9...", p. 36.
- Clayton, p. 104; Kosonen, p. 125.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 9...", pp. 18, 23.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 9...", p. 42.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 9...", p. 38.
- "Rotanak Kiri Provincial Resources"; "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 9...", p. 38.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 9...", p. 29.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 9...", p. 33.
- Riska.
- Bourdier, p. 8; Sith Samath et al., p. 354.
- Sith Samath et al., p. 354; "Untangling the Web of Human Trafficking and Unsafe Migration in Cambodia and Lao PDR".
- Jones et al., p. 44.
- Sith Samath et al., p. 354.
- "Food Taboos and Eating Habits amongst Indigenous People in Ratanakiri, Cambodia"; Hamade.
- "Food Taboos and Eating Habits amongst Indigenous People in Ratanakiri, Cambodia".
- Hamade, p. 14.
- Hamade, p. 13.
- Hamade, p. 16.
- Tyler, p. 34; Sith Samath et al., p. 354
- Brown, Graeme, p. 9; Poffenberger, ch. 4–5.
- Brown, Graeme, p. 9.
- Hamade, p. 5.
- Baird ("Identities and Space..."); Calvet ("Grupos cristianos ...").
- Ashish Joshia Ingty John & Chea Phalla, "Community-based natural resource management and decentralized governance in Ratanakiri, Cambodia", in Tyler, p. 34; Short, p. 171.
- Calvet ("Grupos cristianos ...").
- Van den Berg & Phat Palith, p. 19.
Works cited
- "1999–2000 Provincial Development Plan" . Ratanakiri Department of Planning (3 November 1998). Accessed 31 January 2010.
- "2010 Cambodia Demographic and Health Survey Fact Sheet". Cambodia Directorate General for Health. Accessed 14 July 2015.
- Aun Pheap. "Lawmaker Calls for Ouster of Banlung City Governor". The Cambodia Daily (15 May 2015). Accessed 15 July 2015.
- Austin, Gordon et al. "World Mining Report". Colored Stone (November–December 2005).
- Baird, Ian G. "Identities and Space: The Geographies of Religious Change amongst the Brao in Northeastern Cambodia". Anthropos 104(2) (2009), pp. 457–468.
- Baird, Ian G. "Shifting Contexts and Performances: The Brao-Kavet and Their Sacred Mountains in Northeast Cambodia". Asian Highlands Perspectives 28 (2013), pp. 1–23.
- Ban Chork and Muny Sithyna. "Ratanakiri's Governor Urges Farmers to Change Methods". Khmer Times (25 January 2015). Accessed 14 July 2015.
- Bann, Camille. "An Economic Analysis of Tropical Forest Land Use Options, Ratanakiri Province, Cambodia" (PDF). International Development Research Centre (1997). Accessed 4 May 2008.
- Becker, Elizabeth. When the War was Over: Cambodia and the Khmer Rouge Revolution. PublicAffairs (1998). ISBN 1-891620-00-2.
- "Bleak outlook for Cambodian gem diggers as mining firms move in". Agence France Presse (28 August 2004).
- Bou Saroeun and Phelim Kyne. "A questionable gem search". Phnom Penh Post (16 March 2001).
- Bourdier, Frédéric. The Mountain of Precious Stones: Ratanakiri, Cambodia: essays in social anthropology. Center for Khmer Studies (2006). ISBN 978-99950-51-04-4. Introduction (PDF) an den ilable online.
- Brown, Graeme, et al. "Forest Stewardship in Ratanakiri: Linking Communities and Government" (PDF). Community Forestry International (2006). Accessed 2 June 2008.
- Brown, Ian. Cambodia. Oxfam (2000). ISBN 0-85598-430-9.
- Calvet, Jordi. "Grupos cristianos y musulmanes se disputan la fe de los indígenas camboyanos" (in Spanish). EFE, via El Confidencial (25 June 2009).
- Calvet, Jordi. "Jóvenes pobres y sin futuro se hacen buscadores de piedras preciosas" (in Spanish). EFE, via El Confidencial (2 April 2009).
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013 Final Report". Cambodia National Institute of Statistics (November 2013). Accessed 14 July 2015.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 3, Sex and Age Structure". Cambodia National Institute of Statistics (December 2013). Accessed 14 July 2015.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 7, Literacy and Educational Attainment". Cambodia National Institute of Statistics (February 2014). Accessed 14 July 2015.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 9, Housing and Household Amenities". Cambodia National Institute of Statistics (March 2014). Accessed 14 July 2015.
- "Cambodia Inter-Censal Population Survey 2013: Report 10, Family and Household". Cambodia National Institute of Statistics (March 2014). Accessed 14 July 2015.
- "Cambodia: Protect Montagnard Refugees Fleeing Vietnam". Human Rights Watch (25 September 2002). Archived from the original on 13 April 2008.
- Chandler, David. Brother Number One: A Political Biography of Pol Pot. Westview Press (1999). ISBN 0-8133-3510-8.
- Chandler, David. The Tragedy of Cambodian History. Yale University Press (1991). ISBN 0-300-05752-0.
- Chey Cham et al. "Bilingual Education in Cambodia" (PDF). Conference on Language Development, Language Revitalization, and Multilingual Education in Minority Communities in Asia, Bangkok, Thailand ( 6–8 November 2003). Accessed 4 May 2008.
- Christie, Ryerson. Peacebuilding and NGOs: State-Civil Society Interactions. Routledge (2012). ISBN 978-1-136-21875-0.
- Clayton, Thomas. "Transition, Culture, and Language in Cambodia". Language Policy, Culture, and Identity in Asian Contexts (Amy B.M. Tsui and James W. Tollefson, editors). Routledge (2006). ISBN 0-8058-5693-5.
- "Climate". Tourism of Cambodia. Accessed 31 January 2010.
- Clymer, Kenton J. The United States and Cambodia, 1969–2000: A Troubled Relationship. Routledge (2004). ISBN 0-415-32602-8.
- Communist Party of Vietnam. "Vietnamese-funded highway open to traffic in Cambodia". Communist Party of Vietnam Online Newspaper (19 May 2010). Accessed 14 July 2015.
- Constitution of Cambodia (1999).
- Dauvergne, Peter. Loggers and Degradation in the Asia-Pacific: Corporations and Environmental Management. Cambridge University Press (2001). ISBN 978-0-521-00134-2.
- Dennis, John. "A Review of National Social Policies" (Regional Environmental Technical Assistance 5771). Asian Development Bank, Poverty Reduction & Environmental Management in Remote Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) Watersheds Project (Phase I, 1999).
- Desai, Ajay and Lic Vuthy. "Status and Distribution of Large Mammals in Eastern Cambodia: Results of the first foot surveys on Mondulkiri and Rattanakiri provinces". Flora and Fauna International, World Wide Fund for Nature, and International Union for Conservation of Nature (1996). Archived from the original on 12 November 2007.
- Dobbs, Leo. "Fishing for gems with the northeastern highlanders". Phnom Penh Post (2 December 1994).
- Dommen, Arthur J. The Indochinese Experience of the French and the Americans. Indiana University Press (2001). ISBN 0-253-33854-9.
- "Election results". Cambodia National Election Committee. Accessed 18 June 2008.
- Etcheson, Craig. After the Killing Fields: Lessons from the Cambodian Genocide. Greenwood Publishing Group (2005). ISBN 0-275-98513-X.
- The Far East and Australasia 2003. Routledge (2002). ISBN 1-85743-133-2.
- "Final Assessment and Report on 2012 Commune Council Elections". The Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia (October 2012). Accessed 15 July 2015.
- "Food Taboos and Eating Habits amongst Indigenous People in Ratanakiri, Cambodia" (PDF). Health Unlimited (February–April 2002). Accessed 7 May 2008.
- Fox, Jefferson. "Understanding a Dynamic Landscape: Land Use, Land Cover, and Resource Tenure in Northeastern Cambodia". Linking People, Place, and Policy (Stephen Joseph Walsh and Kelley A. Crews-Meyer, editors). Springer (2002). ISBN 1-4020-7003-9.
- Hall, Derek et al. Powers of Exclusion: Land Dilemmas in Southeast Asia. NUS Press (2011). ISBN 978-0824836030.
- Hamade, Prudence. "Indigenous Peoples Food Diary": Ratanakiri, Cambodia, 2002–2003 (PDF). Health Unlimited (2003). Accessed 5 May 2008.
- Headley, Robert K. Jr. et al. Modern Cambodian–English Dictionary. Dunwoody Press (1997). ISBN 0-931745-78-0.
- Hubbel, Dave. "Indigenous people and development in northeast Cambodia" (PDF). Watershed vol. 12 no. 2 (March–October 2007), pp. 33–42.
- Hughes, Caroline. The Political Economy of Cambodia's Transition, 1991–2001. Routledge (2003) ISBN 0-7007-1737-4.
- Hun Sen. "Selected Comments at Groundbreaking Ceremony to Build NR 78 between Baan Lung and O Yadao in the Province of Ratanakiri." Cambodia New Vision (maintained by the Cabinet of Hun Sen) (4 January 2007). Archived from the original on 12 November 2007.
- Indigenous Peoples: Ethnic Minorities and Poverty Reduction (Cambodia). Asian Development Bank (June 2002). ISBN 971-561-437-X.
- "Indigenous women working towards improved maternal health" (PDF). Health Unlimited (May 2006). Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 January 2007.
- "International Boundary Study No. 32: Cambodia–Laos Boundary" (PDF). Office of the Geographer, US Bureau of Intelligence and Research (12 June 1964). Accessed 4 May 2008.
- Ishida, Masami (ed.) Five Triangle Areas in the Greater Mekong Subregion (BRC Research Report No. 11). Bangkok Research Center, IDE-JETRO (2012).
- Ith Sotha. "Geographical Names of the Kingdom of Cambodia" (PDF). In Eighth United Nations Conference on the Standardization of Geographical Names, Berlin, 27 August-5 September 2002: Reports by Governments on the Situation in Their Countries and on the Progress Made in the Standardization of Geographical Names Since the Seventh Conference. United Nations (29 August 2002).
- Japan Environmental Council. The State of the Environment in Asia 2005/2006. Springer (2005). ISBN 4-431-25028-X.
- Jones, Sidney et al., editors. Repression of Montagnards: Conflicts Over Land and Religion in Vietnam's Central Highlands. Human Rights Watch (2002). ISBN 1-56432-272-6.
- Kissinger, Henry. Ending the Vietnam War. Simon & Schuster (2003). ISBN 0-7432-4577-6.
- Kosonen, Kimmo. "Vernaculars in Literacy and Basic Education in Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand." Language Planning and Policy: Issues in Language Planning and Literacy (Anthony J. Liddicoat, editor). Multilingual Matters (2007). ISBN 1-85359-977-8.
- Kurczy, Stephen. "Cambodia's last frontier falls". Asia Times (16 June 2009).
- Levett, Connie. "New world mysteries test Cambodia's lost tribe". The Age (24 February 2007).
- Martin, Marie Alexandrine. Cambodia: A Shattered Society (Mark W. McLeod, translator). University of California Press (1994). ISBN 0-520-07052-6.
- Men Sothy and Chhun Sokunth. "Crop Monitoring and Forcasting Bulletin" [sic] (PDF). Cambodia Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (December 2007). Accessed 8 May 2008.
- "Officials: Cambodia's Ratanakiri severely flooded, Mekong may burst banks". Xinhua News Agency (8 August 2007).
- "Over 1 mln foreign tourists flock to Cambodia". Thai Press Reports (19 August 2008).
- Palmer, Beverley. The Rough Guide to Cambodia. Rough Guides (2002). ISBN 1-85828-837-1.
- Perera, Jayantha. Land and Cultural Survival: The Communal Land Rights of Indigenous Peoples in Asia. Asian Development Bank (2009). ISBN 978-971-561-801-4.
- Poffenberger, Mark, editor. Communities and Forest Management in Southeast Asia. International Union for Conservation of Nature (1999). OCLC 43102655.
- "Preliminary Report: Virachey National Park RAP 2007, Cambodia" (PDF). Conservation International – Cambodia ( 1–15 October 2007). Accessed 31 January 2010.
- "Project Profile of Priority Projects along the Asian Highway: Cambodia" (PDF). United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific. Archived from the original on 7 June 2011.
- "Rattanakiri". United Nations World Food Programme. Accessed 4 May 2008.
- Ray, Nick and Greg Bloom. Cambodia. Lonely Planet (2014). ISBN 978-1-74360-026-9.
- Ray, Nick and Daniel Robinson. Cambodia. Lonely Planet (2008). ISBN 1-74104-317-4.
- "Rethinking Poverty Reduction to Protect and Promote the Rights of Indigenous Minorities in Cambodia: A Human Rights Approach to Land and Natural Resources Management". NGO Forum on Cambodia (April 2005). Accessed 31 January 2010.
- Riddell, Ebony. "Community-led safe motherhood advocacy, Ratanakiri, Cambodia". Journal of the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health vol. 126 no. 6 (November 2006): 258–59.
- Riska, Gunilla. "NGOs in the GMS". Asian Development Bank. Accessed 21 August 2008.
- Rotanak Kiri Provincial Resources. Cambodia National and Provincial Resources Data Bank (2003). Archived from the original on 8 August 2004.
- "Settlement and agriculture in and adjacent to Virachey National Park" (PDF). Cambodia Ministry of the Environment (June 2006). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 October 2007.
- Short, Philip. Pol Pot: Anatomy of a Nightmare. Macmillan (2006). ISBN 0-8050-8006-6.
- Sith Samath et al. "Addressing Anarchy: Decentralization and Natural Resource Management in Ratanakiri, Upland Cambodia". Institutions, Livelihoods, and The Environment (Andrea Straub, editor). Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (2001). ISBN 87-87062-98-4.
- Spooner, Andrew. Cambodia. Footprint Travel Guides (2008). ISBN 1-906098-15-8.
- Stark, Miriam T. "Pre-Angkorian and Angkorian Cambodia". Southeast Asia: From Prehistory to History (Ian Glover and Peter S. Bellwood, editors). Routledge (2004). ISBN 0-415-29777-X
- Stidsen, Sille, editor. The Indigenous World 2006. International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (2007). ISBN 87-91563-18-6.
- Stuart-Fox, Martin. A History of Laos. Cambridge University Press (1997). ISBN 0-521-59746-3.
- Suzuki, Regan. "The Intersection of Decentralization and Conflict in Natural Resource Management: Cases from Southeast Asia" (PDF). International Development Research Centre, Rural Poverty and Environment Working Paper Series, working paper 17 (March 2005). Accessed 2 June 2008.
- Thomas, Amanda. "Long-distance house calls". Boston Globe (12 December 2004).
- Thomas, Anne et al. "Empowering Ethnic Minorities in the Cambodian Highlands". From Bullets to Blackboards (Emily Vargas-Baron and Hernando Bernal Alarcon, editors). Inter-American Development Bank (2005). ISBN 1-931003-99-8.
- Tyler, Stephen R. Comanagement of Natural Resources: Local Learning for Poverty Reduction. International Development Research Centre (2006). ISBN 1-55250-346-1.
- United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific. The Contribution of Tourism to Poverty Alleviation. United Nations (published 2006; contains papers presented at a 2003 conference). ISBN 92-1-120445-3.
- "Untangling the Web of Human Trafficking and Unsafe Migration in Cambodia and Lao PDR". Seagen Waves vol. 1 no. 1 (February 2008). Asian Development Bank. Accessed 4 May 2008.
- Vajpeyi, Dhirendra K. Deforestation, Environment, and Sustainable Development: A Comparative Analysis. Greenwood Publishing Group (2001). ISBN 0-275-96989-4.
- Van den Berg, Conny and Phat Palith. "On people, roads and land: Immigration and its consequences for Highland communities in Ratanakiri" (PDF). International Development Research Centre (October 2000). Accessed 4 May 2008.
- "Vietnamese-funded highway inaugurated in Cambodia". Sài Gòn Giải Phóng (20 March 2010). Accessed 14 July 2015.
- Vinding, Diana, editor. The Indigenous World 2002–2003. International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (2003). ISBN 87-90730-74-7.
- Vinding, Diana, editor. The Indigenous World 2004. International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (2004). ISBN 87-90730-83-6.
- Waldick, Lisa. "Staking a Claim in Cambodia's Highlands". International Development Research Centre (30 March 2001). Accessed 2 June 2008.
- "Welcome to Ratnakiri". Tourism of Cambodia (2007). Archived from the original on 3 April 2009.
- "Yali Falls Dam: Impacts on Ratanakiri Province, Cambodia". Australian Mekong Resource Centre, University of Sydney (10 March 2003). Accessed 4 May 2008.
External links
Media related to Ratanakiri Province at Wikimedia Commons