Malaysia's New Ethnoscapes and Ways of Belonging

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acts of citizenship
African International Students
Bersih Rallies
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Chin Refugees
Chinese Malaysian
citizenship rights
Citizenship Studies
Civil Society
cosmopolitan belonging research
Cosmopolitan Solidarity
cosmopolitanism
Domestic Work Arrangements
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Foreign Spouses
Graduated Sovereignty
Indonesian Domestic Workers
Kuala Lumpur
Malaysia
Malaysian Citizens
Malaysian Employers
Marriage Migrants
migration studies
NGO Intervention
Overseas Malaysians
postcolonial Malaysia
PR Application
refugee integration
refugees
Social Reproduction
Social Visit Passes
stateless populations
Stateless Rohingya
Taiwanese Wives
transnational identities
transnational migration
United Malays National Organisation
Urban Social Landscapes
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138087996
  • Weight: 250g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book provides a picture of a globalized Malaysia where its conventionally-conceived multi-ethnic composition of Malays, Chinese, Indians and Others rub shoulders with or interact more intimately on a daily basis with transnational ethnoscapes of migrant workers, asylum seekers, international students, and foreign spouses. It asks how, as Malaysians become wedded to their citizenship, they extend the same awareness of rights and claims to non-citizens such as African international students, the Indonesian maids who look after their children, and the Chins and stateless Rohingyas who populate the landscape as refugees and undocumented workers. What are the possibilities of forming cosmopolitan solidarities with non-Malaysians? And what are the newcomers’ strategies for place-making and belonging? And to bring the discussions of citizenship in Malaysia into relief, it is also asked how Malaysians abroad seek to enact and make meaningful their Malaysian citizenship. A diversity of experiences shapes the narratives in the chapters: of racialization, rejection, boundary-making and exclusivity, resilience and adaptation.

This book was published as a special issue of Citizenship Studies.

Gaik Cheng Khoo teaches Film and Cultural Studies at the University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus. She publishes on Malaysian film, food and identity. Julian C.H. Lee is a Senior Lecturer in Global Studies, and member of the Centre for Global Research, RMIT University. He publishes on Malaysian civil society, democracy and multiculturalism.