Items where Author is "Loughlin, N."
Loughlin, N. (2025). Is Chinese Investment Driving Authoritarianism? Evidence from the First Decade of the Belt and Road in Southeast Asia. Comparative Politics, 57(4), pp. 505-528. doi: 10.5129/001041525x17370641227381
Phorn, B. & Loughlin, N. (2025). Cambodia in 2023 and 2024: Hun Manet Rules, but His Father’s Shadow Looms Large. Asian Survey, 65(2), pp. 323-335. doi: 10.1525/as.2025.65.2.323
Loughlin, N. (2024). Transnational Organised Crime Meets Embedded Corruption: Cambodia’s Role in Southeast Asia’s Online Scam Epidemic. Global China Pulse, 3(1), pp. 27-34. doi: 10.69131/GCP.03.01.2024.02
Loughlin, N. & Milne, S. (2024). Speculative land grabs and Chinese investment: Cambodia’s evolving regime of dispossession. Globalizations, pp. 1-19. doi: 10.1080/14747731.2024.2320494
Loughlin, N. (2023). Hun Manet's Cambodia The Diplomat.
Loughlin, N. (2023). Cambodia in 2022: Crime and Misgovernance. Asian Survey, 63(2), pp. 324-335. doi: 10.1525/as.2023.63.2.324
Bo, M. & Loughlin, N. (2022). Overlapping Agendas on the Belt and Road: The Case of the Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone. Global China Pulse, 1(1), pp. 85-98.
Loughlin, N. & Grimsditch, M. (2021). How Local Political Economy Dynamics Are Shaping the Belt and Road Initiative. Third World Quarterly, 42(10), pp. 2334-2352. doi: 10.1080/01436597.2021.1950528
Loughlin, N. (2021). Chinese Linkage, Leverage, and Cambodia’s Transition to Hegemonic Authoritarianism. Democratization, 28(4), pp. 840-857. doi: 10.1080/13510347.2021.1888931
Loughlin, N. (2021). Beyond Personalism: Elite Politics and Political Families in Cambodia. Contemporary Southeast Asia: a journal of international and strategic affairs, 43(2), pp. 241-264.
Loughlin, N. & Milne, S. (2021). After the Grab? Land Control and Regime Survival in Cambodia since 2012. Journal of Contemporary Asia, 51(3), pp. 375-397. doi: 10.1080/00472336.2020.1740295
Loughlin, N. (2020). Reassessing Cambodia’s Patronage System(s) and the End of Competitive Authoritarianism: Electoral Clientelism in the Shadow of Coercion. Pacific Affairs: an international review of Asia and the Pacific, 93(3), pp. 497-518. doi: 10.5509/2020933497