The Political Mobilization of the Christian Community in Malaysia
Title
The Political Mobilization of the Christian Community in Malaysia
Price
€ 103,99
ISBN
9789400604773
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Number of pages
186
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Discipline
Asian Studies
Also available as
Hardback - € 104,00
Table of Contents
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Table of Contents
List of abstracts and keywords
List of abbreviations
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Chapter One: Contextualizing and Theorizing Christian Political Mobilization in Malaysia,
Chapter Two: A Competitive Authoritarian Regime, Islamization, and the Christian Community,
Chapter Three: Unflinching Principles and Whimpers of Protest, 1980–90,
Chapter Four: Learned Submission to Semi-opposition Engagement, 1991–2002,
Chapter Five: Seizing Political Opportunities for Mobilization, 2003–7,
Chapter Six: From Resisting Repression to Oblique Oppositional Mobilization, 2008–15,
Chapter Seven: Stories from the East: Resisting Islamization and Preserving Local Rights,
Chapter Eight: Conclusion,
Bibliography,
Appendix A: Official Letter from Najib Razak to Bishop Moon Hing Ng Proposing a 10-Point Solution
Index

Pui Yee Choong

The Political Mobilization of the Christian Community in Malaysia

Spanning Malaysia’s post-independence period, and using the repression-mobilization nexus as a key theoretical framework, this study outlines how its Christian community delicately and simultaneously defends its religious rights without being construed as anti-Islam in the face of state-led “Islamization”. By primarily focusing on the 1980s to the contemporary period, while considering subnational differences between East and West Malaysia, this study charts the changes in the community’s tactics of resistance and explains why it chose to adopt a non-partisan and non-violent approach despite targeted repression. In outlining the interplay between a minority community’s mobilization and national-level contestation, it focuses especially the role played by the Christian elites. Additionally, it raises key questions that remain relevant in the study of contentious politics: How do minority community in semi-democratic contexts protect their rights? What are their options and constraints for resistance? And how do changes in the political environment mould their strategy and tactics of resistance?
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Author

Pui Yee Choong

Pui Yee Choong is a senior lecturer with the Department of Southeast Asian Studies at University of Malaya. She has published articles, book chapters and opinion editorials on contemporary Malaysian political and social issues. She was previously the history and regional studies programme coordinator at the Penang Institute and a senior analyst at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.