BitS. (1991), The Warrior Heritage: A Psychological Perspective of Cambodian Trauma, Bit, El Cerrito, CA.
2.
BrettC. (2010), ‘Geographical knowledges and neoliberal tensions: Compulsory land purchases in the context of contemporary urban redevelopment’, Environment and Planning A, Vol 42, No 4, pp 856–873.
3.
CaldeiraT. (2000), City of Walls: Crime, Segregations, and Citizenship in São Paulo, University of California Press, Berkeley, CA.
4.
CollierP. (2000), ‘Doing well out of war: An economic perspective’, in BerdalM.MaloneD., eds, Greed and Grievance: Economic Agendas in Civil Wars, Lynne Rienner, Boulder, CO.
5.
GrimsonA. (2008), ‘The making of new urban borders: Neoliberalism and protest in Buenos Aires’, Antipode, Vol 40, No 4, pp 504–512.
6.
HughesC. (2002), The Political Economy of Cambodia's Transition, 1991–2001, Curzon, Richmond,
7.
LizéeP. (1993), ‘The challenge of conflict resolution in Cambodia’, Canadian Defence Quarterly, Vol 23, No 1, pp 35–44.
8.
LizéeP. (2000), Peace, Power and Resistance in Cambodia: Global Governance and the Failure of Conflict Resolution, St. Martin's Press, New York.
9.
MushedS. M. (2002), ‘Conflict, civil war and underdevelopment: An introduction’, Journal of Peace Studies, Vol 39, No 4, pp 387–393.
10.
ÖjendalJ. (1996), ‘Democracy lost? The fate of the U.N. – implanted democracy in Cambodia’, Contemporary Southeast Asia, Vol 18, No 1, pp 193–218.
11.
TynerJ. (2009), ‘Imagining genocide: Anti-geographies and the erasure of space in democratic Kampuchea’, Space and Polity, Vol 13, No 1, pp 9–20.