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Dr. Tyrell Haberkorn and Dr. Paul Chambers join Free to Think to discuss the use of Thailand's lèse-majesté law to intimidate and silence scholars.
After three decades living and working in Thailand, Professor Paul Chambers was arrested in April 2025 and charged under Article 112 of the Thai Criminal Code with lèse-majesté, or insulting the monarchy. He believes he was targeted in retaliation for his research on the military and democracy. After an international campaign on his behalf, the charges against him were dropped, but he lost his university position, and his visa was revoked. He is currently in the United States, where he notes: "If I am outside of Thailand, I can go on with my work and probably do a better job of describing the problems of the Thai military."
Professor Tyrell Haberkorn is an expert on state violence in Thailand. She highlights the chilling effect of Paul's arrest on scholars and the wider society, as well as the history of lèse-majesté law in Thailand. "People were jailed for performing plays, for having conversations in taxis, for bathroom graffiti, for social media posts."
By Scholars at Risk4.9
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Dr. Tyrell Haberkorn and Dr. Paul Chambers join Free to Think to discuss the use of Thailand's lèse-majesté law to intimidate and silence scholars.
After three decades living and working in Thailand, Professor Paul Chambers was arrested in April 2025 and charged under Article 112 of the Thai Criminal Code with lèse-majesté, or insulting the monarchy. He believes he was targeted in retaliation for his research on the military and democracy. After an international campaign on his behalf, the charges against him were dropped, but he lost his university position, and his visa was revoked. He is currently in the United States, where he notes: "If I am outside of Thailand, I can go on with my work and probably do a better job of describing the problems of the Thai military."
Professor Tyrell Haberkorn is an expert on state violence in Thailand. She highlights the chilling effect of Paul's arrest on scholars and the wider society, as well as the history of lèse-majesté law in Thailand. "People were jailed for performing plays, for having conversations in taxis, for bathroom graffiti, for social media posts."