Global Education

Teacher resources to encourage a global
perspective across the curriculum

Cambodia

Map for Cambodia
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  • Educating people about the protection of children in Phnom Penh, Cambodia encourages all community members to play their part.
  • Poor people fear being forced to leave their homes, built along Bassac River in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
  • Women work hard in the rice paddies in Cambodia.
  • Agriculturalist Victor Onions works with farmers in Cambodia to increase the variety and productivity of their crops.
  • Highly trained, well-equipped de-miners check land to find and destroy landmines and unexploded ordnance in Cambodia.
  • Signs warn people of landmines and other dangerous items in Cambodia.
  • A sign warns people to avoid metal objects, helping them to live safely in areas still to be cleared of landmines.
  • These landmine survivors compete in the Cambodian National Volleyball League (Disabled) and gain a new outlook on life.
  • Learning about the types of landmines and unexploded ordnance is important to prevent injury and death in Cambodia.
  • Landmine survivor Koe Kan’s prosthetic leg enables him to work in his garden and sell his vegetables at the market.
  • In Cambodia, former soldier Keth Noeurn runs a business as a barber. His artificial limb means he feels less dependent.

Case studies

Integrated mine action in Cambodia

Learning about the types of landmines and unexploded ordnance is important to prevent injury and death in Cambodia.
Recovering from landmines and unexploded ordnance involves a lengthy process of clearance, medical care, education and rebuilding lives.
Read more

Rice

Newly planted paddy rice seedlings in a field near Sekong, Laos.
Traditional rice production is backbreaking work and often has low yields.
Read more
Flag of Cambodia

Population:

14,864,646

GNI per capita (PPP US$):

2,690

Population living on less than US$1.25 per day:

19%

Adult literacy rates:

74%

Access to water:

67%
Did you know?

During the rainy season the Tonle Sap River reverses its direction to flow northward into the Tonle Sap Lake.

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Geography

Physical geography

Cambodia covers an area of 176,520 square kilometres and stretches about 580 kilometres from east to west and 450 kilometres from north to south. The country is dominated by the fertile lowland around the north–south flowing Mekong River and Tonle Sap (Great Lake). The lowland is bordered by forested highland, whose highest point is Phnum Aoral at 1,810 metres.

Climate

Cambodia has a tropical monsoonal climate with distinct wet and dry seasons. During the wet season (May to September) spectacular electrical storms can flood large areas within minutes. Temperatures are high all year round with the annual average varying from 21 °C to 35 °C.

Environment

In 1990, forest covered almost three-quarters of Cambodia. Extensive logging has rapidly reduced coverage to 57%. Forested areas are home to small numbers of elephants, tigers, leopards, rhinoceros, gibbons, bats and crocodiles. Butterflies, snakes and birds such as cormorants, cranes and ducks are also common. Although many areas have been cleared landmines and other remnants of war make over 1,000 square kilometres of farm land inaccessible.

Population

The vast majority of the over 14 million population live in the central lowlands region. Most live in farming communities, while about 20% live in urban areas. During the dry season many thousands of people move into the cities from the countryside to seek work.

People

Culture and identity

Most people are Khmer, with small communities of Chinese and Vietnamese. There are also indigenous hill tribes in the remote north-east of Cambodia.

Cambodians traditionally greet each other by pressing their palms together in front of their bodies and bowing, called a sompeah. Generally, a younger or lower rank person initiates the greeting.

The traditional Khmer costume consists of a shirt or blouse and a skirt-like lower garment, sampot for women and sarong for men, and the krama, or long scarf, which is worn around the neck, over the shoulders, or wrapped turban-style around the head. Most Cambodians today, however, wear simple Western dress.

Contemporary Cambodia has a rich cultural heritage from the Khmer dynasties, which were at their peak from the 9th to 13th centuries. The vast Buddhist complex at Angkor in western Cambodia is one of the world’s greatest antiquities. Buddhist images are portrayed in carved sandstone reliefs, which decorate many buildings and handicraft items. Classical Cambodian dance mimes the legendary lives of ancient religious deities.

Health

Many in Cambodia have poor access to health services and safe water and sanitation, which has a great effect on health. Life expectancy is 64 years (66 for women and 62 for men) and the infant mortality rate is 51 per 1,000 live births. Communicable diseases, including acute respiratory infection and tuberculosis, affect large numbers of people. About 1% of the population live with HIV/AIDS. About 29% of Cambodian children are moderately to severely stunted because of chronic malnutrition. Explosive remnants of war continue to injure people and stretch the limited health facilities.

Religion and beliefs

Theravada Buddhism is a significant influence in Cambodian life and was reinstituted in 1989 as the state religion. Small communities of Muslim and Christians also exist. Astrology is widely observed.

Food and shelter

The basic foods are several varieties of rice, fish, and vegetables. Rice may be less thoroughly milled than it is in many other rice-eating countries, and consequently it contains more vitamins and roughage. Fermented fish, in the form of sauce or paste, is an important protein supplement to the diet. Hot peppers, lemon grass, mint and ginger are the main flavours. Beef, pork, poultry and eggs are eaten on special occasions, or, if the family can afford it, daily. Bananas, mangoes, papayas, rambutan, jackfruit and palm fruit are common. In the cities, many Western foods are available, including daily baked bread.

Rural Cambodian houses are rectangular buildings on stilts with walls of woven bamboo. Typically, a house contains three rooms separated by partitions of woven bamboo. City houses include single-storey brick homes and multi-storey apartment blocks.

Economy

Wealth and poverty

Poverty is widespread particularly among subsistence farmers. The gap between the rich and poor is significant.

Education and work

Almost all children attend primary school but educational standards are low. Less than half of the children attend secondary school, and big discrepancies exist in access to education between rural and urban areas. An estimated 1.3 million children are working. Cambodia faces an urgent need for practical and relevant technical and vocational training. The literacy rate is 74% (male 83%, female 66%).

More than two-thirds of people aged over 15 are employed; the majority being in forestry, fishing and subsistence agriculture.

Industries and products

While Cambodia’s economy is largely agricultural-based, tourism is a fast-growing industry, with almost 3 million visitors in 2012. Garment manufacture, construction, rice milling, fishing, wood and wood products, rubber, cement, gem mining and textiles production are the main industries.

Trade

Timber, clothing, rubber, rice, fish, tobacco and footwear are the main exports to markets in the United States (33%), UK (8%), Germany (8%) and Canada (8%). Cambodia imports petroleum products, cigarettes, gold, construction materials, machinery, motor vehicles and pharmaceutical products from Thailand (27%), Vietnam (20%) and China (19%).

Government

Cambodia is a constitutional monarchy. While the king has no executive power, he appoints the Prime Minister from the party holding the majority of seats in the National Assembly. Elections are held every five years, with the last taking place in 2013. The Cambodian People’s Party is currently in government, with Sen Hun as its Prime Minister.

While Cambodians enjoy a greater level of freedom than in the past, the government continues to face many human rights challenges. Rapid economic growth and the re-instating of land ownership rights have increased demand, meaning land disputes are common. There are restrictions on the freedom of expression of journalists, members of trade unions and opposition parties.

Achievements and challenges

Cambodia continues to recover after decades of war, isolation and genocide. It is one of Asia’s least developed countries and is heavily reliant on foreign assistance.

Integration into the global and regional economies has widened Cambodia’s growth prospects, but weak physical infrastructure, such as poor roads and rail networks and high electricity rates means this growth is limited.

Cross-border organised crime, including people and narcotics trafficking, presents a major problem for Cambodia and the south-east Asian region.

Cambodia has made mixed progress towards achieving its Millennium Development Goals and will struggle to meet the environmental stability goals (MDG 8).

Landmine and unexploded ordnance clearance is progressing rapidly but still affects many rural farmers.

Cambodia and the United Nations have agreed to set up a tribunal to try the surviving leaders of the genocide years.

Links with Australia

Cambodians have arrived in Australia in small numbers from the 1940s, with about 13,000 arriving as refugees after the Khmer Rouge took over Cambodia in 1975. The 2011 census recorded 28,330 Cambodia-born people living in Australia – Victoria (11,355), New South Wales (11,145), South Australia (2,784) and Queensland (1,532). Approximately 132,000 Australian tourists visited Cambodia in 2013.

In 2012–13 two-way merchandise trade between Australia and Cambodia was worth AUD 93 million. Australia exports wheat, cereals and aluminium to Cambodia and imports clothing, footwear, linen and motorcycles. As a least-developed country, Cambodian products are granted tariff-free access to Australia to help promote investment and economic growth.

Australia and Cambodia are working together closely to combat people smuggling and trafficking, child sex tourism, narcotics trafficking and terrorism.

The focus of Australia’s aid to Cambodia is on reducing rural poverty, improving health services, upgrading the country’s infrastructure and promoting access to justice.

Educating people about the protection of children in Phnom Penh, Cambodia encourages all community members to play their part.
Photo by Elizabeth James for AusAID
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Educating people about the protection of children in Phnom Penh, Cambodia encourages all community members to play their part. Photo by Elizabeth James for AusAID
Poor people fear being forced to leave their homes, built along Bassac River in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
Photo by Tim Acker for AusAID
Print | Save
Poor people fear being forced to leave their homes, built along Bassac River in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo by Tim Acker for AusAID
Women work hard in the rice paddies in Cambodia.
Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
Print | Save
Women work hard in the rice paddies in Cambodia. Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
Agriculturalist Victor Onions works with farmers in Cambodia to increase the variety and productivity of their crops.
Photo by Elizabeth James for AusAID
Print | Save
Agriculturalist Victor Onions works with farmers in Cambodia to increase the variety and productivity of their crops. Photo by Elizabeth James for AusAID
Highly trained, well-equipped de-miners check land to find and destroy landmines and unexploded ordnance in Cambodia.
Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
Print | Save
Highly trained, well-equipped de-miners check land to find and destroy landmines and unexploded ordnance in Cambodia. Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
Signs warn people of landmines and other dangerous items in Cambodia.
Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
Print | Save
Signs warn people of landmines and other dangerous items in Cambodia. Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
A sign warns people to avoid metal objects, helping them to live safely in areas still to be cleared of landmines.
Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
Print | Save
A sign warns people to avoid metal objects, helping them to live safely in areas still to be cleared of landmines. Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
These landmine survivors compete in the Cambodian National Volleyball League (Disabled) and gain a new outlook on life.
Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
Print | Save
These landmine survivors compete in the Cambodian National Volleyball League (Disabled) and gain a new outlook on life. Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
Learning about the types of landmines and unexploded ordnance is important to prevent injury and death in Cambodia.
Photo by Rodney Evans for AusAID
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Learning about the types of landmines and unexploded ordnance is important to prevent injury and death in Cambodia. Photo by Rodney Evans for AusAID
Landmine survivor Koe Kan’s prosthetic leg enables him to work in his garden and sell his vegetables at the market.
Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
Print | Save
Landmine survivor Koe Kan’s prosthetic leg enables him to work in his garden and sell his vegetables at the market. Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
In Cambodia, former soldier Keth Noeurn runs a business as a barber. His artificial limb means he feels less dependent.
Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID
Print | Save
In Cambodia, former soldier Keth Noeurn runs a business as a barber. His artificial limb means he feels less dependent. Photo by Kevin Evans for AusAID