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BY Brooke Edwards.  Brunei  Burma  Cambodia  Timor- Leste  Indonesia  Laos  Malaysia  Philippines  Singapore  Thailand  Vietnam.

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Presentation on theme: "BY Brooke Edwards.  Brunei  Burma  Cambodia  Timor- Leste  Indonesia  Laos  Malaysia  Philippines  Singapore  Thailand  Vietnam."— Presentation transcript:

1 BY Brooke Edwards

2  Brunei  Burma  Cambodia  Timor- Leste  Indonesia  Laos  Malaysia  Philippines  Singapore  Thailand  Vietnam

3  Here are some of the crops and how they were grown in southeast Asia countries?  In Vietnam they grow corn, cassava and sweet potatoes.  Some of the people grow their crops by the sea.  They also grow rice in some parts of southeast Asia.

4  They have Nation- building and the construction of citizenship, so often conducted or coerced from the center are all too commonly studied from the center as well.  The government of Brunei has three branches, the Executive, the Legislature, and the Judiciary.  The monarch of Brunei is the chief of state as well as the head of the government. He is assisted by the cabinet, another part of the Executive branch.  Brunei is divided in four parts of administrative districts which constitute a significant aspect of the Brunei government.

5  In the early 1960’s Britain and the United States were still trying to come to terms with the powerful forces of indigenous nationalism unleashed by the second world war.  The Indonesia – Malaysia confrontation – a situation in southeast Asia as we have seen since the war- was a complex test of Anglo- American relations.  The covers of the previously neglected ground of British and American politics in southeast Asia in the 1960s, going beyond the typical focus on the Vietnam war. They used a large range of new archival sources to illuminate previously uncovered areas of international history.

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7  Asia that nomadic hordes spilled over to the south and west to create vast empires, culminating in the Mongol conquests that reached their Zenith in China during the time of Kublai Khan 1215-94 and in India during the time of Akbar 1542-1605.  In the west, Caucasoid people predominate, including in the trans-Himalaya, while, to the east, Mongoloids descend down to the Brahmaputra Plain. Indeed, some mountain ranges provide passages for migration, as for example the highlands of Yunnan, which constitute another epicenter of Mongoloid dispersal.

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9  The term southeast Asia refers to an area that is geographically, linguistically, and ethnically diverse. The regions is made up of two distinct regions the mainland peninsula and an island or insular zone.  Southeast Asia is bounded on the west side by the India and the north of china and the Pacific ocean.  There area has a tropical climate, with heavy rain and high temperatures.

10  Providers of the economic of climate change in the southeast Asia region provide people with the weather changing all year around.  It also argues that the current global economic crisis offers Southeast Asia an opportunity to start a transition towards a climate-resilient and low-carbon economy by introducing green stimulus programs that can simultaneously shore up economies, create jobs, reduce poverty, lower carbon emissions, and prepare for the worst effects of climate change.

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14  Climate Landforms

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