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งานวิจัยวัฒนธรรมภาคเหนือ

267

____ (1980) “Annual Non-Buddhist Religious Observances of Mae Hong Son Shan”,

Journal of the Siam Society

68(2): 48-56.

_____ (1981) “The Southeast Asian Context of Theravada Buddhism”,

Anthropology

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___

(1983) “The Shan Rocket Festival: Buddhist and Non-Buddhist Aspects of Shan

Religion”,

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Durrenberger, Paul andNicola Tannenbaum (1983) “ADiachronic Analysis of Shan Cropping

Systems”,

Ethnos: Journal of Anthropology

48(3-4):177-194.

Grand, Amanda Le (1993) “Enhancing Appropriate Drug Use: The Contribution of Herbal

Medicine Promotion: A Case Study in Rural Thailand”,

Social Science & Medicine

36(8): 1023-1035.

Grave, Peter (1995) “Beyond the Mandala: Buddhist Landscapes and Upland-Lowland

Interaction in North-West Thailand AD1200-1659”,

World Archaeology

, 27(2): 243-265.

Hunsa Payomyong Sethabouppha (2002) ‘Buddhist FamilyCareGiving: APhenomenological

Study of Family Caregiving to the Seriously Mentally Ill in Thailand’, Ph. D. Dissertation,

University of Virginia.

Iida, Junko (2003) ‘Thai Massage and the Construction of Thai Traditional Medicine: Diversity

of Authoritative Knowledge among Social Contexts’, Ph.D. Dissertation, The School

of Social and Cultural Studies, Graduate University of Advanced Studies, Osaka:

National Museum of Ethnology,.

Irvin, Walter (1982) ‘The Thai-Yuan ‘Madman’ and the Modernising Developing Thai Nation,

as Bounded Entities Under Threat: A Study in the Replication of a Single Image’,

Ph. D. Dissertation, SOAS, University of London.

Jiradej Manosroi (2005) “Translation of Lanna Medicinal Plant Recipes for Research and

Development of Modern Pharmaceuticals and the Understanding of the Lanna Thai

Cultures and Histories”, Paper presented at the 9

th

International Conference on Thai

Studies, Northern Illinois University, 3-6 April.

Kammerer, Cornelia Ann(1996) “Begging for Blessing Among Akha Highlanders of Northern

Thailand”, in Cornelia Ann Kammerer and Nicola Beth Tannenbaum (ed

.) Merit

and Blessing in Mainland Southeast Asia in Comparative Perspective

( pp. 79-97).

Connecticut: Yale University Southeast Asia Studies.

Kwanchewan Buadaeng (2001) ‘Negotiating Religious Practices in a Changing Sgaw Karen

Community in North Thailand.’ Ph. D. Dissertation, Department of Anthropology,

University of Sydney.