Malayan Chinese muted response to the Malayan Union proposal in 1946 which promised common citizenship rights and equal opportunity to non-Malays have not been sufficiently explained by existing literature. This article suggests that such muted response is due to the presence of Chinese transnationalism that diluted and diverted the community’s attention from seeking a Malayan identity. The article provides evidences that the increasing return nature of Chinese transnational politics and the institutionalisation of Chinese transnational linkages made a complete removal of Chinese transnational ties difficult. This article employs a historical institutional analysis, tracing the development and evolution of Chinese transnationalism from the ...
The mass arrival of Chinese to the West Coast of Sabah in present day East Malaysia since the middle...
Singapore in the 1950s had undergone a series of transitions, from 150 years of British colonial rul...
This article reviews the history of the Hakka, Cantonese and Hokkien dialect groups who had successi...
Includes bibliographical references.The purpose of this thesis is to examine differing Malayan Chine...
Drawing on archival sources in Britain, Singapore, Malaysia, and the United States, this article exp...
It is argued that the success of Overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia lies in their unique `Chinesenes...
“The rights of citizenship necessarily carry with them its obligations. A Chinese sage says, “If you...
This study attempts to assess the dynamics of British policy towards the Chinese community in Malaya...
In 1957 Malaya achieved her independence from the British. This was a triumph of racial cooperation....
Owing to their status as an immigrant minority community, the political, social and economic life of...
This article examines the evolution of the Chinese in Sarawak since the Brooke administration up to ...
Malaysian Chinese is the second largest group in the country’s population and has been actively invo...
The purpose of this article is to present the Chinese diaspora in two Southeast Asian countries, Mal...
The revival of ethnic culture in the current globalizing world challenges the anthropologists and s...
This article explores why and how a minority social movement persists despite persistent constraints...
The mass arrival of Chinese to the West Coast of Sabah in present day East Malaysia since the middle...
Singapore in the 1950s had undergone a series of transitions, from 150 years of British colonial rul...
This article reviews the history of the Hakka, Cantonese and Hokkien dialect groups who had successi...
Includes bibliographical references.The purpose of this thesis is to examine differing Malayan Chine...
Drawing on archival sources in Britain, Singapore, Malaysia, and the United States, this article exp...
It is argued that the success of Overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia lies in their unique `Chinesenes...
“The rights of citizenship necessarily carry with them its obligations. A Chinese sage says, “If you...
This study attempts to assess the dynamics of British policy towards the Chinese community in Malaya...
In 1957 Malaya achieved her independence from the British. This was a triumph of racial cooperation....
Owing to their status as an immigrant minority community, the political, social and economic life of...
This article examines the evolution of the Chinese in Sarawak since the Brooke administration up to ...
Malaysian Chinese is the second largest group in the country’s population and has been actively invo...
The purpose of this article is to present the Chinese diaspora in two Southeast Asian countries, Mal...
The revival of ethnic culture in the current globalizing world challenges the anthropologists and s...
This article explores why and how a minority social movement persists despite persistent constraints...
The mass arrival of Chinese to the West Coast of Sabah in present day East Malaysia since the middle...
Singapore in the 1950s had undergone a series of transitions, from 150 years of British colonial rul...
This article reviews the history of the Hakka, Cantonese and Hokkien dialect groups who had successi...