Aboriginal People of Peninsular Malaysia

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A01=Govindran Jegatesen
Aboriginal Malay
Author_Govindran Jegatesen
Cameron Highlands
Cash Crop Agriculture
Category=JP
Chinese Peranakan Community
Colonial Administration
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eq_non-fiction
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Eurycoma Longifolia
gender relations
indigenous studies
Jabatan Kemajuan Islam Malaysia
Jawi Peranakan
Ketuanan Melayu
Kuala Lumpur International Airport
Labisia Pumila
Lembaga Adat
Malaccan Sultanate
Malay Ethnic Group
Malay Muslim Majority
Malaya Plan
Malaysia's aboriginal people
Malaysian Administration
migration patterns
MP.
National Art Gallery
Negeri Sembilan
non-Orang Asli
Orang Asli
Orang Asli Communities
Orang Asli Groups
Orang Asli migration
Orang Asli Settlements
Peninsular Malaysia
postcolonial Malaysia
social inequality research
urban anthropology
urban indigenous community adaptation
urban indigenous migrants

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032083339
  • Weight: 270g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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To date, most studies of Malaysia’s aboriginal people, the Orang Asli, have studied the community in either the rural or forest settings. This book, however, outlines the dynamics of Orang Asli migration to Kuala Lumpur – Malaysia’s most urbanised region – and explores the lived experiences of these individuals in the urban space. The book begins by charting the history of the Orang Asli under British colonial rule followed by the community’s experiences under the Malaysian government, in an attempt to provide a deeper understanding of the economic and social complexities facing the Orang Asli today. Based on extensive original research, the book goes on to discuss the interesting changes taking place among urban Orang Asli migrants with regards to gender dynamics, while exploring the unique ways in which these urban indigenous migrants maintain close links with their home communities in the rural spaces of Peninsular Malaysia. The book concludes by assessing how research on the urban Orang Asli fits into broader studies of urban and contemporary indigeneity in both Malaysia and abroad.

Govindran Jegatesen is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Ethnic Studies (KITA) at the National University of Malaysia.

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