1st Edition

Singapore in the Malay World Building and Breaching Regional Bridges

By Lily Zubaidah Rahim Copyright 2009
    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    Relations between Singapore and her immediate Malay neighbours have been perennially fraught with tension and misunderstanding. In making sense of this complex relationship, Lily Rahim explores the salience of historical animosities and competitive economic pressures, and Singapore’s janus-faced security and foreign economic policy orientation and ‘regional outsider’ complex. Focusing on Singapore’s relations with Malaysia, the book also examines the Indonesian dimension in bilateral relations. It highlights the paradoxical similarities in the nation-building approaches of Singapore and Malaysia. The author reflects critically on sensitive issues such as the rhetoric and reality of meritocracy and multiracialism in Singapore, and analyses the city-state’s weak regional soft power credentials and reputation as a political laggard despite its economic achievements.

    Incorporating perspectives and frameworks from the disciplines of comparative politics, area studies, international relations, political economy and history, this multidisciplinary study offers groundbreaking insights into the way in which the neighboring states of Singapore and Malaysia see themselves, each other, the region and beyond. This book will be of particular interest to keen observers of Southeast Asian politics.

    1. Singapura: Siapa nama kamu? Di-mana awak tinggal?  2. Remembering and Forgetting: Nusantara Malays in the Singaporean National Imagination  3. Competing and Comparable Paradigms of Authoritarian Nation-Building  4. The Frightened Country and the Geopolitics of Insecurity  5. The Politics of Economic Competition and Cooperation  6. The Singa and Garuda: From Kiasu to Soft Power Diplomacy?  Conclusion: Paradoxes and Diplomatic Blowbacks

    Biography

    Lily Zubaidah Rahim is a Senior Lecturer in Government and International Relations at the University of Sydney, Australia. She is a specialist in the comparative politics of Southeast Asia, with a particular research interest in the politics of identity, authoritarian governance, regionalism and reformist Islam in Southeast Asia.