2021
DOI: 10.3390/rs13061158
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Uneven Frontiers: Exposing the Geopolitics of Myanmar’s Borderlands with Critical Remote Sensing

Abstract: A critical remote sensing approach illuminates the geopolitics of development within Myanmar and across its ethnic minority borderlands. By integrating nighttime light (NTL) data from 1992–2020, long-term ethnographic fieldwork, and a review of scholarly and gray literature, we analyzed how Myanmar’s economic geography defies official policy, attesting to persistent inequality and the complex relationships between state-sponsored and militia-led violence, resource extraction, and trade. While analysis of DMSP-… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…21 In Myanmar, the areas with the greatest luminosity would indicate greater government presence and/or relative government capacity since the provision of electricity reflects the government's control of specific territories in the area. Since no reliable set of GDP data at the local levels is provided by the Myanmar authorities, the night-time luminosity data is a useful proxy for economic activity at the local level (Bennett and Faxon, 2021). Second, to assess the government's capacity and reach, as well as potential access to international support and markets, we include two sets of distance measures.…”
Section: Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…21 In Myanmar, the areas with the greatest luminosity would indicate greater government presence and/or relative government capacity since the provision of electricity reflects the government's control of specific territories in the area. Since no reliable set of GDP data at the local levels is provided by the Myanmar authorities, the night-time luminosity data is a useful proxy for economic activity at the local level (Bennett and Faxon, 2021). Second, to assess the government's capacity and reach, as well as potential access to international support and markets, we include two sets of distance measures.…”
Section: Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Jiang (2003) also brings remote sensing analysis “to the cultural realm” (p. 228) by cross-referencing the landscape-level connections in inner Mongolia made apparent by remote sensing imagery with ethnographic interviews. Bennett and Faxon (2021) combine imagery of the Earth at night with ethnographic fieldwork in Myanmar’s borderlands to draw attention to processes that can go undetected, such as government clearances of communities lacking electricity, which would not have appeared in the imagery in the first place. This omission in the data underscores the analytical risks present in remote sensing’s exclusive focus on visual measures of change (Turner, 2003).…”
Section: Practices Of Critical Remote Sensing: Expose Engage Empowermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Methodologically, we combined the "grounded" approaches of political ecology and ethnography that rely on context-and place-dependent field-based research and analysis to critically engage in LULCC via satellite remote sensing [49]. Political ecology can be described as a multiscaled approach to studying the political economy of the environment [50].…”
Section: Field-based Data Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%