Page 206 - RUICHSS 2023 Proceeding
P. 206

University of Ruhuna                                          ISSN: 2706-0063
               Matara, Sri Lanka

               Amarasinghe, H. (2021). Language, Identity, and Conflict: A Study of Tamil-
                       Sinhala  Language  Policy  and  Politics  in  Sri  Lanka.  Journal  of
                       Language and Social Psychology, 40(4), 399-416.

               Ratnayake, L. R. (2020). Religious Violence in Sri Lanka: The Causes and
                       Consequences of Ethno-Religious Conflict. International Journal of
                       Conflict and Violence, 14(2).

               Seneviratne, H. L. (1999). The work of kings: The new Buddhism in Sri Lanka.
                       University of Chicago Press.

               Smith,  B.  L.  (2007).  The    Christian    Influence  on  Legal  Development  in
                       Ceylon. Journal of Asian Studies, 26 (4).

               Stirrat,  R.  L.  (1992).  The  dynamics  of  interethnic  relations  in  Sri  Lanka:
                       Sinhalese, Tamils and Muslims in the Eastern Province. St. Martin's
                       Press.

               Tambiah, S. J. (1992). Buddhism betrayed? Religion, politics, and violence in
                       Sri Lanka. University of Chicago Press.

               Welikala, A. (2018). Divided by one language: Factionalism and the language
                       of politics in Sri Lanka. Oxford University Press.

                Wickramasinghe,  N.  (2011).  Sri  Lanka  in  the  Modern  Age:  A  History  of
                    Contested Identities. University of Hawaii Press.







                                                   147
   201   202   203   204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211