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This book analyses the mobilisation of race, rights and the law in
Malaysia. It examines the Indian community in Malaysia, a quiet
minority which consists of the former Indian Tamil plantation
labour community and the urban Indian middle-class. The first part
of the book explores the role played by British colonial laws and
policies during the British colonial period in Malaya, from the
1890s to 1956, in the construction of an Indian "race" in Malaya,
the racialization of labour laws and policies and labour-based
mobilisation culminated in the 1940s. The second part investigates
the mobilisation trends of the Indian community from 1957 (at the
onset of Independent Malaya) to 2018. It shows a gradual shift in
the Indian community from a "quiet minority" into a mass mobilising
collective or social movement, known as the Hindu Rights Action
Force (HINDRAF), in 2007. The author shows that activist lawyers
and Indian mobilisers played a crucial part in organizing a civil
disobedience strategy of framing grievances as political rights and
using the law as a site of contention in order to claim legal
rights through strategic litigation. Highly interdisciplinary in
nature, this book will be of interest to scholars and researchers
examining the role of the law and rights in areas such as
sociolegal studies, law and society scholarship, law and the
postcolonial, social movement studies, migration and labour
studies, Asian law and Southeast Asian Studies.
This book analyses the mobilisation of race, rights and the law in
Malaysia. It examines the Indian community in Malaysia, a quiet
minority which consists of the former Indian Tamil plantation
labour community and the urban Indian middle-class. The first part
of the book explores the role played by British colonial laws and
policies during the British colonial period in Malaya, from the
1890s to 1956, in the construction of an Indian "race" in Malaya,
the racialization of labour laws and policies and labour-based
mobilisation culminated in the 1940s. The second part investigates
the mobilisation trends of the Indian community from 1957 (at the
onset of Independent Malaya) to 2018. It shows a gradual shift in
the Indian community from a "quiet minority" into a mass mobilising
collective or social movement, known as the Hindu Rights Action
Force (HINDRAF), in 2007. The author shows that activist lawyers
and Indian mobilisers played a crucial part in organizing a civil
disobedience strategy of framing grievances as political rights and
using the law as a site of contention in order to claim legal
rights through strategic litigation. Highly interdisciplinary in
nature, this book will be of interest to scholars and researchers
examining the role of the law and rights in areas such as
sociolegal studies, law and society scholarship, law and the
postcolonial, social movement studies, migration and labour
studies, Asian law and Southeast Asian Studies.
This book brings together a group of innovative scholars examining
the contemporary issue of effecting gender and sexuality justice in
the context of Asia, consonant with engendering a just, equitable
and sustainable development for all. These grassroots initiatives
are woven through three complementary sections of the book: gender
justice in Asia, sexuality justice in Asia, and finding resolutions
through conflict. The book foregrounds strategies that aim to call
out and challenge existing gender and sexuality injustices with
regard to women and the LGBTIQA+ community by: assessing the
efficacy of gender mainstreaming policies through micro-credit
schemes for women in East Java, Indonesia; proliferating the
signifiers of the hijab (veil) by postmodern Malay-Muslim women or
'Hijabistas' within the consumerist culture of Malaysia; making
visible the injustices of the Syariah legal system for non-Muslim
women, and ground-breaking legislation that could potentially
recognise same-sex marriages in Thailand; privileging the
narratives of gay women diplomats within the highly masculinised
field of diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific region; foregrounding the
narratives of Filipino gay men, intimate partner violence among
young Indonesian Christian young people, masculine-identifying
lesbians in Singapore, young LGBT people in rural Vietnam, and a
Chinese-Muslim Malaysian female-to-male transgender person; and
proposing new ways of becoming an inclusive church through the
radical act of befriending persons living with HIV and AIDS in
Southeast Asia. This book celebrates diverse and inclusive voices
and strategies of gender and sexual agents of change in envisioning
and bringing to fruition a just and transformative society for all.
It is of interest to students and scholars researching gender and
sexuality in areas of development studies, international relations,
socio-legal studies, and literary studies.
Vulnerability is a term that can be studied from different
dimensions - the social, legal, economic and political. This book
explores these dimensions and captures the vulnerabilities of
particular groups in Malaysia - the transgenders, women, children,
aboriginal and indigenous people, the rural fisherfolk, the
stateless and the economically disempowered. Mirroring the spectrum
of "vulnerable groups" defined by the United Nations Global Compact
in the 2016 Sustainable Development Goals Report, this book
highlights the unique features that portray vulnerabilities -
including gender, age, indigeneity, socioeconomic status and
ethnicity. The case studies of vulnerable groups in Malaysia - a
multicultural, diverse plural Asian state - would be appreciated by
both undergraduate and postgraduate students, academics,
researchers and policy-makers, keen in Asian Studies and
vulnerabilities.
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