116 results
Search Results
2. Gut microbiota in early life and its influence on health and disease: A position paper by the Malaysian Working Group on Gastrointestinal Health.
- Author
-
Lee, Yeong Yeh, Hassan, Siti Asma, Ismail, Intan Hakimah, Chong, Sze Yee, Raja Ali, Raja Affendi, Amin Nordin, Syafinaz, Lee, Way Seah, and Majid, Noorizan Abdul
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN microbiota , *GASTROINTESTINAL system , *GASTROINTESTINAL diseases , *PROBIOTICS , *PREBIOTICS , *HEALTH , *CONSENSUS (Social sciences) - Abstract
The role of gut microbiota in early life and its impact on gut health and subsequent diseases remain unclear. There is a lack of research and awareness in this area, especially in the Asia-Pacific region, including Malaysia. This paper reports the position of a Malaysian Working Group on some key issues surrounding gut microbiota in early life and its role in gut health and diseases, as well as experts' stand on probiotics and prebiotics. The group reached a consensus that certain factors, including elective caesarean; premature deliveries; complementary feeding; use of antibiotics, prebiotics and/or probiotics; and exposure to the external environmental, have an impact on gut microbiota in early life. However, as evidence is lacking, especially from the Asia-Pacific region, further studies are needed to understand how gut microbiota in early life affects subsequent diseases, including allergy, inflammatory bowel disease, obesity and infantile colic. Lastly, although beneficial in acute diarrhoeal disease and probably allergic eczema, probiotics (and/or prebiotics) should be used cautiously in other gut dysbiotic conditions until more data are available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Critical assessment of medical devices on reliability, replacement prioritization and maintenance strategy criterion: Case study of Malaysian hospitals.
- Author
-
Amran, Mohd Effendi, Aziz, Sa'ardin Abdul, Muhtazaruddin, Mohd Nabil, Masrom, Maslin, Haron, Habibah Norehan, Bani, Nurul Aini, Mohd Izhar, Mohd Azri, Usman, Sahnius, Sarip, Shamsul, Najamudin, Siti Sara, Zamzam, Aizat Hilmi, Ahmad Kamil, Ahmad Safwan, Azilah, Nurul Farhana, and Muhammad‐Sukki, Firdaus
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL equipment reliability , *QUALITY function deployment , *HOSPITAL quality control , *INDUSTRY 4.0 , *ANALYTIC hierarchy process , *ENGINEERING services , *MEDICAL equipment - Abstract
The Biomedical Engineering Maintenance Services (BEMS) is a comprehensive maintenance program that ensures the safety and reliability of medical devices. Significant and crucial devices are identified and prioritized for best practice prior to the equipment life cycle to mitigate functional problems, alarmed by the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) underlying the modernization agenda. A model of multi‐criteria decision‐making (MCDM) to prioritize medical devices according to their criticality is presented in this paper, with the utilization of quality function deployment (QFD) and fuzzy logic in the development of the model through a quantitative survey of experts from all regions in Malaysia. As a result, a customized version of the Asset Criticality Assessment (ACA) is developed and is recommended for use in more than 144 Ministry of Health (MOH) hospitals. Subsequently, real data of four selected devices are pulled from the Asset and Services Information System (ASIS) to demonstrate a relevant and comparable end‐result using the QFD and fuzzy logic. In essence, the key contribution of the customized ACA model is that it assesses a promising evaluation with a broader range on both the performance of medical devices and the appropriate asset replacement choices. This leads to an effective maintenance strategy for each device and the modernization of reliability computation metrics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. From cosmopolitan convergences to situated religious cosmopolitanism: The early spread of the Bahá'í Faith in Singapore and Malaya (1950–1975).
- Author
-
Tavangar, Temily Tianmay
- Subjects
- *
COSMOPOLITANISM , *WORLD citizenship , *FAITH - Abstract
This paper contributes to the debate on cosmopolitanism by examining the spread of the Bahá'í Faith in Singapore and Malaya (1950–1975). The Bahá'í Faith is a significant case as its followers came to span the globe in 150 years. This paper probes into the relationship between the faith's transnational spread and its religious cosmopolitanism in three parts. First, I outline the inseparability of 'world citizenship' from Bahá'í teachings. Second, I trace its spread in Singapore and Malaya – a process that initially relied on serendipitous encounters between travellers and migrants, one that I call 'cosmopolitan convergences'. Third, I explore the expansion of the Bahá'í Faith among Malaya's Semai tribe. Here, Bahá'í world citizenship became grounded in collective cultural practices, facilitating what I call 'situated religious cosmopolitanism'. The connection between the contrasting populations discussed in this paper demonstrates the potential of grounding religious networks within normative cosmopolitan ideals and practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Dynamics of coastal tourism: drivers of spatial change in South‐East Asia.
- Author
-
Hampton, Mark P., Bianchi, Raoul, and Jeyacheya, Julia
- Subjects
- *
DOMESTIC tourism , *TOURISM , *COASTAL development , *CONFLICT transformation , *LUXURIES - Abstract
Coastal tourism has grown significantly across South‐East Asia from the 1960s, particularly in three key destinations hosting large tourist numbers: Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand. It encompasses different scales from basic backpacker accommodation in budget enclaves to large scale capital‐intensive luxury resort enclaves. Coastal tourism studies typically range from descriptive analyses of destinations' evolutionary dynamics and resort morphology to more granular ethnographic inspections of socio‐economic patterns of transformation and resource conflicts. More recent critical research theorizes the spatial reorganization of coastal tourism in relation to economic restructuring processes. Although national tourism policy and economic development is often analysed, forces shaping coastal tourism development have been little examined and research typically focusses on impact case studies without analysing the underlying political economy. This paper interrogates the political‐economic drivers of the historical‐geographical and spatial organization of coastal tourism in these three major destinations and demonstrates how processes of tourism capital accumulation are experienced/contested via intensified commodification leading to increasingly complex and diversified coastal tourism political economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Global value chains for medical gloves during the COVID‐19 pandemic: Confronting forced labour through public procurement and crisis.
- Author
-
Hughes, Alex, Brown, James A., Trueba, Mei, Trautrims, Alexander, Bostock, Ben, Day, Emily, Hurst, Rosey, and Bhutta, Mahmood F
- Subjects
- *
SURGICAL gloves , *VALUE chains , *FORCED labor , *GOVERNMENT purchasing , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
This paper evaluates ways in which labour issues in global value chains for medical gloves have been affected by, and addressed through, the COVID‐19 pandemic. It focuses on production in Malaysia and supply to the United Kingdom's National Health Service and draws on a large‐scale survey with workers and interviews with UK government officials, suppliers and buyers. Adopting a Global Value Chain (GVC) framework, the paper shows how forced labour endemic in the sector was exacerbated during the pandemic in the context of increased demand for gloves. Attempts at remediation are shown to operate through both a reconfigured value chain in which power shifted dramatically to the manufacturers and a context where public procurement became higher in profile than ever before. It is argued that the purchasing power of governments must be leveraged in ways that more meaningfully address labour issues, and that this must be part of value chain resilience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Creating one nation? Ethno‐national imaginaries, audiences and the critical reception of TV nation branding messages.
- Author
-
Matthews, Julian and Baba Zain, Haida
- Subjects
- *
PLACE marketing , *SOCIAL conflict , *ETHNIC conflict , *SOCIAL engineering (Political science) , *ETHNIC groups , *ETHNOARCHAEOLOGY , *POLITICAL participation - Abstract
Although we are aware that nation branding features across the media, discussion and debate continue over its perceived influence in peoples' everyday understandings and lives. This paper, by way of a response, examines peoples' reactions to specific government campaign messages of patriotism and unity designed to combat internal ethnic conflict in Malaysia. Malaysia, at this time, provides a unique subject of analysis as it includes an instance where a domestically focused nation branding campaign is being employed to instigate unity among ethnic groups residing within a country with a history of ethnic conflict and social engineering policies. The project introduces several TV campaign story examples, identified for their prevalence in the 1Malaysia nation branding campaign, to representatives from three prominent ethnic groups in Malaysia to map their responses. The paper finds that group representatives interpret the stories using their shared insider views of the nation or 'ethno‐national imaginaries'. Their acceptance of, and critical challenges to, the images and narratives of the TV campaign stories are seen therefore to reflect group representatives' wider positions, interests and participation in an ongoing political conflict shaped within the logics of the Malaysian nation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Demonic possession: Narratives of domestic abuse and trauma in Malaysia.
- Author
-
Sahdan, Zuriatunfadzliah, Pain, Rachel, and McEwan, Cheryl
- Subjects
- *
DEMONOLOGY , *DOMESTIC violence , *CONTROL (Psychology) , *NARRATIVES - Abstract
Every society deploys narratives concerning the phenomenon of domestic abuse which serve to downplay and normalise it. Drawing on qualitative research with survivors in Malaysia, and working from a feminist postcolonial framework, this paper explores how the notion of demonic possession is used by survivors and perpetrators as a metaphor for domestic abuse, and a narrative to make sense of and excuse it. The idea of demonic possession has utility because of its close fit both with perpetrators' behaviour and the symptoms experienced by survivors with trauma. The research focuses on the intimate dynamics of abuse, including coercive control and intimate captivity, and the pivotal role of possession and trauma in the successful exertion of control and in extending the damaging effects of abuse. We argue that demonic possession reflects another way in which globally endemic practices of domestic abuse are justified and explained; it provides a means for perpetrators to evade responsibility for abuse, and a way in which the pernicious effects of both abuse and trauma on survivors, their families, and wider society are sometimes dismissed. The paper highlights the significance of culturally sensitive approaches to domestic violence and trauma as a counterpoint to western‐centric understandings. It also stresses the need for locally generated approaches to awareness raising and support services in Malaysia and elsewhere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Compiled by AILA ReN coordinator.
- Author
-
El Gamal, Glenda
- Subjects
- *
APPLIED linguistics , *ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
The article focuses on topics related to the International Association of Applied Linguistics (AILA). Information on the history and projects of the Research Network ReCAL or Research Cultures in Applied Linguistics of AILA is provided. A call for papers for the 21st AILA World Congress with the theme "Linguistic Diversity, Inclusion, and Sustainability" to be held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in August 2024 is presented.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Digitization of natural history collections: A guideline and nationwide capacity building workshop in Malaysia.
- Author
-
Ong, Song‐Quan, Mat Jalaluddin, Nurzatil Sharleeza, Yong, Kien Thai, Ong, Su Ping, Lim, Kooi Fong, and Azhar, Suhaila
- Subjects
- *
NATURAL history , *OPTICAL character recognition , *DIGITIZATION , *HUMAN resource planning , *NATURAL history museums , *WORKSHOPS (Facilities) - Abstract
Natural history museum collections are the most important sources of information on the present and past biodiversity of our planet. Most of the information is primarily stored in analogue form, and digitization of the collections can provide further open access to the images and specimen data to address the many global challenges. However, many museums do not digitize their collections because of constraints on budgets, human resources, and technologies. To encourage the digitization process, we present a guideline that offers low‐cost and technical knowledge solutions yet balances the quality of the work and outcomes. The guideline describes three phases of digitization, namely preproduction, production, and postproduction. The preproduction phase includes human resource planning and selecting the highest priority collections for digitization. In the preproduction phase, a worksheet is provided for the digitizer to document the metadata, as well as a list of equipment needed to set up a digitizer station to image the specimens and associated labels. In the production phase, we place special emphasis on the light and color calibrations, as well as the guidelines for ISO/shutter speed/aperture to ensure a satisfactory quality of the digitized output. Once the specimen and labels have been imaged in the production phase, we demonstrate an end‐to‐end pipeline that uses optical character recognition (OCR) to transfer the physical text on the labels into a digital form and document it in a worksheet cell. A nationwide capacity workshop is then conducted to impart the guideline, and pre‐ and postcourse surveys were conducted to assess the confidence and skills acquired by the participants. This paper also discusses the challenges and future work that need to be taken forward for proper digital biodiversity data management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Involving people with lived experience in developing a core outcome set for implant dentistry research. The Implant Dentistry‐Core Outcomes Sets and Measures (ID‐COSM) project.
- Author
-
Needleman, Ian, Sanz, Mariano, Carrillo de Albornoz, Ana, Safii, Syarida, Hassan, Norul Husna Mohamad, Qian, Shujiao, and Tonetti, Maurizio
- Subjects
- *
PROSTHETICS , *DENTAL implants , *MIDDLE-income countries , *ARTIFICIAL implants , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *EXPERIENCE , *LOW-income countries , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DENTISTRY , *MEDICAL research , *DELPHI method - Abstract
Aims: The aims of this project were to establish the outcomes for dental implant research that are important to people with lived experience (PWLE) and to achieve consensus with those developed by dental professionals (DPs) for a core outcome set (COS). This paper reports the process, outcomes and experiences of involving PWLE in developing a COS for dental implant research: the Implant Dentistry Core Outcome Sets and Measures project. Materials and Methods: Overall methods were guided by the Core Outcome Set Measures in Effectiveness Trials (COMET) initiative. Initial outcome identification was achieved from focus groups with PWLE employing calibrated methods across two low‐middle‐income countries (China and Malaysia) and two high‐income countries (Spain and the United Kingdom). Following consolidation of the results, the outcomes were incorporated into a three‐stage Delphi process with PWLE participation. Finally, consensus between PWLE and DPs was achieved using a mixed live and recorded platform. The experiences of PWLE involvement in the process was also evaluated. Results: Thirty‐one PWLE participated in four focus groups. Thirty‐four outcomes were suggested across the focus groups. Evaluation of the focus groups revealed a high level of satisfaction with the engagement process and some new learning. Seventeen PWLE contributed to the first 2 Delphi rounds and 7 to the third round. The final consensus included 17 PWLE (47%) and 19 DPs (53%). Out of the total of 11 final consensus outcomes considered essential by both PWLE and health professionals, 7 (64%) outcomes mapped across to ones that PWLE initially identified, broadening their definition. One outcome (PWLE effort required for treatment and maintenance) was entirely novel. Conclusions: We conclude that engaging PWLE in COS development can be achieved across widely different communities. Furthermore, the process both broadened and enriched overall outcome consensus, yielding important and novel perspectives for health‐related research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Valued waste/wasted value: Waste, value and the labour process in electronic waste recycling in Singapore and Malaysia.
- Subjects
- *
WASTE recycling , *VALUE creation , *ELECTRONIC waste management , *ELECTRONIC waste , *RECYCLING industry - Abstract
This paper focuses on value creation in electronic waste, and supports the argument (c.f. Herod et al., 2014) that 'waste' embodies congealed labour – the product of the labour process. This analysis of itinerant rag‐and‐bone collectors demonstrates that value creation by informal labour accrues as congealed labour in recycled e‐waste through the agentic acts of collecting, salvaging and extracting. This paper highlights the central role of informal labour in this labour process and pushes further the conceptualisation of 'wasted labour' (McGrath‐Champ et al., 2015) by calling for greater attention to the agentic nature of labour in value creation, rather than simply being a passive means of production. Drawing on Marx's circuit of capital, this paper articulates the central role played by informal labour – an oft overlooked economic actor – in enabling the subsequent recycling processes and conceptualises them as pivotal to the recycling industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. An international collaborative approach to learning histology using a virtual microscope.
- Author
-
Then, Sue-Mian, Kokolski, Marie, Mbaki, Yvonne, Merrick, Deborah, and Anderson, Susan
- Subjects
- *
COLLABORATIVE learning , *ACTIVE learning , *ACADEMIC degrees , *HIGHER education , *STUDENT surveys - Abstract
Histology is often taught in higher education settings using online virtual microscopes (VM). This study aimed to develop and evaluate the use of VM in teaching on a BSc degree at the University of Nottingham by surveying students and staff. A key development was the use of an e-workbook so that students were actively engaged in creating their own bespoke revision material. Subsequently, this approach was used in a second study evaluating the use of VM in teaching the histology and pathology of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract via group work with students from two BSc courses at the University of Nottingham; one based at Derby (RDHC) and the other in Malaysia (UNMC). Students worked together in groups to complete an e-workbook, develop a presentation, and decide how to collaborate and communicate. An evaluation of these activities revealed advantages in developing transferrable skills, and good engagement with both the histology topic and group work. Analysis of assessment of the module at UNMC showed that student performance improved in the histology-based module after the intervention (p < 0.01) and that this improvement was not evident in other modules taken by the cohort. Furthermore, when interrogating the questions from the examination paper that asked students to identify features from histological images, fewer questions were seen as ‘difficult’ (p < 0.001) and more were seen as ‘average’ (p < 0.01). This study demonstrates that the use of VM in histology combined with active learning in creating a revision resource enhances engagement and depth of learning. When further combined with collaborative active group work, students developed a range of histology knowledge and transferrable skills, with notable improvement in examination performance relative to other contemporaneous modules. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The role of ombudsman: Resolving financial disputes in Malaysia.
- Author
-
Mohd Zain, Muhamad Ikhwan, Rahmat, Nur Ezan, and Ilias, Ibtisam @ Ilyana
- Subjects
- *
OMBUDSPERSONS , *CONSUMER price indexes , *MONETARY incentives , *CONFLICT management - Abstract
The paper highlights the establishment of the Ombudsman for Financial Services (OFS) in Malaysia as a good alternative avenue for the equitable settlement of disputes regarding financial services. It has been operating since 2016. However, its accessibility to reach wider financial consumers is restricted due to its limited monetary jurisdiction which is incompatible with the current market conditions. Adopting a qualitative content analysis approach, this study reviews the primary legal framework for implementing the financial ombudsman scheme in Malaysia under Financial Service Act 2013 (FSA), Islamic Financial Service Act 2013 (IFSA), Financial Services (Financial Ombudsman Scheme) Regulations 2015 and Islamic Financial Services (Financial Ombudsman Scheme) Regulations 2015 with special focus on monetary jurisdiction. The study has also analyses the jurisdiction of other countries, and the results found that the monetary jurisdiction of the law in Malaysia is still small and limited. Based on comparative analysis, this study suggests an agile approach in determining the monetary jurisdiction through a flexible provision allowing a review every 3 years based on the consumer price index and relevant reports. This way, its accessibility to wider financial disputes will be elevated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Barriers of and strategies for shared decision‐making implementation in the care of metastatic breast cancer: A qualitative study among patients and healthcare professionals in an Asian country.
- Author
-
Lee, Ping Yein, Cheong, Ai Theng, Ghazali, Sazlina Shariff, Rashid, Aneesa Abdul, Ong, Siu Ching, Ong, Soo Ying, Alip, Adlinda, Sylvia, McCarthy, Chen, May Feng, Taib, Nur Aishah, Jaganathan, Maheswari, Ng, Chirk Jenn, and Teo, Soo‐Hwang
- Subjects
- *
BREAST tumor treatment , *CULTURE , *HEALTH services accessibility , *HEALTH facilities , *FOCUS groups , *PATERNALISM , *RESEARCH methodology , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *PUBLIC health , *INTERVIEWING , *QUALITATIVE research , *LABOR supply , *SELF-efficacy , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *DECISION making , *COMMUNICATION , *NURSES , *POLICY sciences , *PATIENT-professional relations , *JUDGMENT sampling , *DATA analysis software , *THEMATIC analysis , *CANCER patient medical care , *GOAL (Psychology) - Abstract
Background: Shared decision‐making has been shown to improve the quality of life in metastatic breast cancer patients in high‐literacy and high‐resource settings. However, limited studies have examined the cultural preferences of metastatic breast cancer patients with shared decision‐making implementation and the barriers encountered in an Asian setting where societal norms predominate and physician decision‐making is at the forefront. This paper aims to identify (1) barriers to practising shared decision‐making faced by healthcare professionals and patients and (2) strategies for implementing shared decision‐making in the context of metastatic breast cancer management in Malaysia. Methods: We conducted a qualitative study involving 12 patients diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer, 16 healthcare professionals and 5 policymakers from surgical and oncology departments at public healthcare centres in Malaysia. Semi‐structured in‐depth interviews and focus group discussions were conducted. The interviews were recorded, transcribed verbatim and analysed using the thematic approach. Nvivo software was used to manage and analyse the data. Results: Five main themes emerged from the study: healthcare provider–patient communication, workforce availability, cultural and belief systems, goals of care and paternalism versus autonomy. Other strategies proposed to overcome barriers to implementing shared decision‐making were training of healthcare professionals and empowering nurses to manage patients' psychosocial issues. Conclusion: This study found that practising shared decision‐making in the public health sector remains challenging when managing patients with metastatic breast cancer. The utilization of decision‐making tools, patient empowerment and healthcare provider training may help address the system and healthcare provider–patient barriers identified in this study. Patient or Public Contribution: Patients were involved in the study design, recruitment and analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Of Bumping and Bending: Foreign Universities' FDI Strategies in Malaysia.
- Author
-
Schulze, Marc Philipp
- Subjects
- *
UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *HIGHER education , *EDUCATION policy , *SCHOOL administration - Abstract
Universities from varying institutional and geographical contexts have increasingly invested in offshore subsidiaries in the Malaysian private higher education sector. Literature on transnational education policy and management as well as economic‐geographic accounts of firms' transnationalisation or public service provision have not investigated foreign providers' direct investment and market access strategies in the higher education sector. This paper addresses these gaps, showing how and why foreign actors' investment and market involvement in Malaysia have changed. Empirical data is drawn from qualitative interviews and policy documents. The research reveals that foreign universities have strategically modified their business partnerships and bi‐national accreditation to bypass and bend state regulation of market access as well as to restructure internal organisation and geographical configuration. The paper proposes conceptualising foreign higher education providers as transnationalising, reflexive networks within networks that respond to dynamic market access regulation by adopting firm‐like investment strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Quantifying the effect of landscape structure on transport costs for biorefinery of agricultural and forestry wastes in Malaysia.
- Author
-
Ong, Chulee, Deprés, Gabrielle, Hollebecq, Jean‐Eudes, Shaiffudin Hishamudin, Mohammad O., Kamaruddin, Norfaryanti, Anugerah, Adhe R., Amir Mustafa, Amira N., and Roda, Jean‐Marc
- Subjects
- *
AGRICULTURAL wastes , *COST structure , *AGRICULTURAL economics , *FOREST economics , *FRAGMENTED landscapes , *TRANSPORTATION costs , *U.S. dollar - Abstract
In the context of climate change, sustainable biorefinery helps to mitigate carbon emissions. This paper examines how landscape structure metrics allow us to better understand the economics of agricultural and forestry wastes transportation. To verify that the landscape structure plays a significant role, we quantify the fragmentation of various lignocellulosic feedstock in Malaysia, as a typical tropical country. Fragmentation is compared with the variations of truck size, transport distance, and biomass nature. We use GRASS GIS to develop a series of transport cost maps, to quantify feedstocks, to run various biomass transport simulations, optimize locations of potential biorefineries, and to compute landscape structure metrics. We find that the cost of 1 million tonnes feedstock increases by more than 4 USD/tonne for every added unit of edge density (fragmentation index). It also increases by more than 6 USD/tonne for every added 100 km of average transportation. The average truck size has also a strong nonlinear relation to the cost with −84 USD/tonne when changing from 3‐ to 26‐tonne trucks. To our knowledge, this is the first paper to address simultaneously fragmentation with the other classical logistic factors in a tropical country like Malaysia. It has strong implications for policymakers: the importance of the landscape structure makes a seemingly abundant biomass not viable for biorefineries if too fragmented compared to a much less abundant one, but more concentrated. It also implies that in tropical countries where the landscape is typically very fragmented, multi‐crop feedstocks could be considered for sustainable biorefineries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Screening of forward osmosis membrane potential to treat produced water.
- Author
-
Nasir, R., Suhaimi, A.S., Mohshim, D.F., Maqsood, K., and Alsaadi, A.
- Subjects
- *
OIL field brines , *REVERSE osmosis , *MEMBRANE potential , *OSMOSIS , *CHEMICAL oxygen demand , *PETROLEUM waste - Abstract
The produced water is considered one of the largest waste streams in the oil and gas industries. Untreated produced water discharge damages the environment. Forward osmosis utilizes a dilute solution to concentrate contaminated streams to treat produced water. This paper tried to shed some light on forward osmosis's potential in treating produced water, measuring forward osmosis commercial membrane's effectiveness in treating produced water feed taken from two different points in an oil and gas facility in Malaysia. The rejection for chemical oxygen demand and boron was greater than 80 %, and a considerable decrease in forward osmosis flux was observed. The corrugated plate interceptor's inlet feed decreased by 73 % relative to the initial flux, while it decreased by 52.5 % for equalization tank feed. Design expert® was used to optimize the process using a one‐factor experimental design. The regression models indicated a good fit of model. The R2 was 0.9393 and 0.9888 for corrugated plate interceptor's inlet, and the equalization tank produced water, respectively. The optimization results concluded a 20 % draw solution concentration with the desirability of 0.927 and 0.987 for two feed waters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Urban political ecologies of heritage: Integrating cultural and natural landscapes in Penang, Malaysia.
- Author
-
Connolly, Creighton
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL ecology , *PRESERVATION of cultural property , *SOCIAL ecology , *CULTURAL landscapes , *CULTURAL property , *NATURAL landscaping - Abstract
Over the past few decades, there have been numerous studies examining the interface between cultural heritage conservation and urban (re)development, particularly in rapidly developing regions. On the other hand, scholars have also examined nature conservation movements in the context of encroaching (urban) development. However, this body of research has, with a few exceptions, not considered the interrelationship between natural and cultural heritage in urban settings. The paper argues that a renewed understanding of urban heritage – consisting of both cultural and natural elements – is required for effective and socio‐ecologically sustainable approaches to heritage conservation and urban development. To illustrate this argument, the paper draws on an empirical examination of Penang Hill, which is a culturally and ecologically significant area of Penang Island, Malaysia. In conceptualising this relationship, the paper draws on the urban political ecologies of landscape, which is useful in examining the urbanisation of nature and problematising distinctions between urban/rural and natural/cultural. As I will demonstrate, invocations of Penang's rich natural heritage are often framed alongside urban and cultural heritage in local resistance to these developments, which relate to the particular socio‐environmental sensibilities of local stakeholders. The analysis is based on discursive analysis of primary written sources and original interviews with local residents and civil society activists, which helps to demonstrate the crucial role of local communities in achieving more socio‐ecologically just forms of heritage management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Becoming Malay: The Politics of the Cham Migration to Malaysia.
- Author
-
Nakamura, Rie
- Subjects
- *
VIETNAMESE people , *ANCIENT civilization , *POLITICAL refugees , *NINETEENTH century , *PRACTICAL politics , *REFUGEES - Abstract
This paper is about the Cham migration to Malaysia. The Cham people are descendants of Champa, which existed along the central coast of Vietnam between the second and nineteenth centuries. The Muslim Cham came to Malaysia as refugees from mainland Southeast Asia after the establishment of the communist regimes in Vietnam and Cambodia in the 1970s. This paper is one of the outcomes of a nine‐month study among the Cham that initially looked for stories of a hypothetical community called the 'Zomia of the sea'. However, the research findings instead indicated that the Cham were especially selected by the Malaysian authorities and brought into that country for some political purpose. The paper discusses the political reasons behind the acceptance of the Cham people by the Malaysian nation as Melayu‐Champa and examines the process of the Cham refugees' integration into the Malay community. It concludes that the Cham refugees were able to rearticulate who they were by reinterpreting their lost polity of Champa as forming part of an ancient Malay civilization. This was made possible by their being included in the state discourse of the greater Malay world and Malay superiority. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The experience of work‐life balance for women doctors and nurses in Malaysia.
- Author
-
Dousin, Oscar, Collins, Ngan, and Kler, Balvinder Kaur
- Subjects
- *
WORK-life balance , *LABOR demand , *SOCIAL norms , *HEALTH care industry , *PROFESSIONAL ethics , *NURSES - Abstract
This paper explores how a specific context supports or hinders work‐life balance (WLB) experiences focusing on women doctors and nurses in Malaysia. WLB and gender formed the conceptual basis of a qualitative study using in‐depth, semi‐structured interviews. The 26 participants were employed across public and private healthcare sectors. A systematic multi‐step data analytical procedure produced three key themes which contribute to the contemporary debate on WLB. In Malaysia, contextual factors exert a strong influence on WLB experiences for women doctors and nurses. Due to gender norms, women carry the burden of dual responsibilities for both professional and familial duties which disrupts WLB. Notably, collegiality at work facilitates WLB but is an informal mechanism rooted in a collectivist society. Finally, staff shortages in the healthcare sector also impede WLB. Based on the key themes, recommendations are made for a sustainable workforce in the Malaysian healthcare industry. Key points: WLB experiences for women doctors and nurses in Malaysia are influenced by the contextual environment (gender norms, collectivist work culture and workforce situation).A collectivist work culture supports WLB experiences, but gender norms and staff shortages impede WLB.WLB experiences for women doctors and nurses are supported by an informal institutional structure which exists in the Malaysian healthcare system.HR policy needs to formalise informal practices to support a sustainable workforce. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Choose your battles: How civil society organisations choose context‐specific goals and activities to fight for immigrant welfare rights in Malaysia and Argentina.
- Author
-
Henninger, Jakob and Römer, Friederike
- Subjects
- *
CIVIL society , *DEMOCRATIZATION , *IMMIGRANTS' rights , *SOCIAL & economic rights , *PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
How do the goals and activities of civil society organisations (CSOs) that are active in the field of immigrant welfare rights differ between autocracies and democracies? In this paper, we argue that a mechanism of CSO engagement plays out differently in these two political contexts because organisations adapt their goals and activities to the political regime they operate in. In the empirical analyses, we compare democratic Argentina and electoral‐authoritarian Malaysia using data from CSOs' public mission statements as well as from interviews with CSO members from both countries. We find that in Argentina, more universalistic constitutional provisions and commitments to international treaties allowed CSOs to reference norms of equal treatment, arguing for immigrant access to a variety of programmes, including non‐contributory social assistance benefits. In Malaysia, CSOs relied on moral frames of equality to a lesser extent. Instead, they advocated for inclusion in contributory schemes on the basis of deservingness of migrants given their contributions to society, focusing on minimum standards to guarantee that basic needs are met. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The effects of a theory‐based summary writing tool on students' summary writing.
- Author
-
Chew, Chiou Sheng, Idris, Norisma, Loh, Er Fu, Wu, Wen‐Chi Vivian, Chua, Yan Piaw, and Bimba, Andrew Thomas
- Subjects
- *
ABSTRACTING , *COGNITION , *COMMUNICATIVE competence , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *ENGLISH as a foreign language , *EXPERIENCE , *FOCUS groups , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *READABILITY (Literary style) , *SCHOOL environment , *STUDENTS , *STUDENT attitudes , *RATING of students , *SYSTEMS development , *TEACHING methods , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *LEARNING theories in education , *CONCEPT mapping , *CONTROL groups , *PSYCHOLOGY of Undergraduates ,WRITING - Abstract
This paper focuses on the design and evaluation of a theory‐based computer‐assisted summary writing learning environment called Summary Writing‐PAL (SW‐PAL). The SW‐PAL was developed based on four aspects: summarizing strategies, learning theories, prior knowledge, and cognitive load. A quasi‐experiment that involved 58 undergraduates majoring in Computer Science was conducted to examine the effectiveness of SW‐PAL in writing summaries. Two intact classes were selected with 28 and 30 students in control and experimental groups, respectively. The conventional teaching approach was employed in the control group, whereas the SW‐PAL was introduced to the experimental group. Pretest and posttest were administrated to both groups. The findings indicated that SW‐PAL improved students' summary writing performance. A significant variance was noted between intrinsic and extraneous cognitive load among students with varying levels of English proficiency in the experimental group, signifying that the SW‐PAL is more suitable for students with lower language proficiency. Lay Description: What is already known about this topic: Currently, there has been a lot of interest in CAL English language and numerous summary writing tools have been developed for language learning and teaching.Existing summary writing tools did not focus on learning theories incorporation.Worked examples approach is effective in well‐defined domain (mathematics, physics, etc.), how about if apply in ill‐defined domain (summary writing)? What this paper adds: Design and develop a CAL environment for summary writing.Incorporate learning theories in CAL environment.Apply worked example instructional approach in learning summary writing. Implications for practice and/or policy: Conventional teaching versus CAL environment in summary writing: CAL environment achieved better performance.Worked examples in ill‐defined domain (summary writing) are also effective in language learning.Worked examples is more effective for lower English language proficiency students.Cognitive load: Lower language proficiency students demonstrated lower cognitive load when using CAL environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Conducting community‐based participatory research in an urban Malaysian community: Lessons learned and challenges in establishing partnerships.
- Author
-
Teoh, Gaik Kin, Tan, Maw Pin, Tan, Joo Siang, and Chong, Mei Chan
- Subjects
- *
UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *ABILITY , *ACTION research , *COOPERATIVENESS , *MEDICAL care research , *METROPOLITAN areas , *PARADIGMS (Social sciences) , *SOCIAL participation , *TRAINING , *CULTURAL values , *INDEPENDENT living , *RESEARCH personnel , *DISEASE prevalence - Abstract
Abstract: This paper presents the process of how partnerships are established between an urban residential community and an academic institution in Malaysia by employing community‐based participatory research, which involves researchers, community members, and organizational representatives as coresearchers. The research process encompasses colearning, power sharing, and coconstructing of knowledge, with the community members driving the research direction. The research paradigm is grounded on conducting research with the community. This paper highlights the experience and lessons learned while applying the principles of community‐based participatory research that promotes social participation of older persons living in a residential community. Two pertinent challenges surface in the research process. The first challenge involves the complexity noted in the gap between the emancipation of community‐based participatory research and the hierarchical social structure of the society. The second challenge is the prevalence of unspoken yet subtle domination that undermines the local cultural values affecting the process of coconstructing knowledge with the community. Recommendations for addressing these challenges include future partnerships with other Malaysian communities as well as cross‐border research partnerships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. An overview of genetically modified crop governance, issues and challenges in Malaysia.
- Author
-
Andrew, Johnny, Ismail, Normaz Wana, and Djama, Marcel
- Subjects
- *
CROP growth , *GENETICALLY modified food testing , *STAKEHOLDERS , *HEALTH - Abstract
The application of agricultural biotechnology attracts the interest of many stakeholders. Genetically modified (GM) crops, for example, have been rapidly increasing in production for the last 20 years. Despite their known benefits, GM crops also pose many concerns not only to human and animal health but also to the environment. Malaysia, in general, allows the use of GM technology applications but it has to come with precautionary and safety measures consistent with the international obligations and domestic legal frameworks. This paper provides an overview of GM crop technology from international and national context and explores the governance and issues surrounding this technology application in Malaysia. Basically, GM research activities in Malaysia are still at an early stage of research and development and most of the GM crops approved for release are limited for food, feed and processing purposes. Even though Malaysia has not planted any GM crops commercially, actions toward such a direction seem promising. Several issues concerning GM crops as discussed in this paper will become more complex as the number of GM crops and varieties commercialised globally increase and Malaysia starts to plant GM crops. © 2017 Society of Chemical Industry [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. National comparisons of early career researchers' scholarly communication attitudes and behaviours.
- Author
-
Jamali, Hamid R., Nicholas, David, Herman, Eti, Boukacem‐Zeghmouri, Cherifa, Abrizah, Abdullah, Rodríguez‐Bravo, Blanca, Xu, Jie, Świgon', Marzena, Polezhaeva, Tatiana, and Watkinson, Anthony
- Subjects
- *
SCHOLARLY communication , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *OPEN access publishing , *BEHAVIOR , *SOCIAL media - Abstract
The paper compares the scholarly communication attitudes and practices of early career researchers (ECRs) in eight countries concerning discovery, reading, publishing, authorship, open access, and social media. The data are taken from the most recent investigation in the 4‐year‐long Harbingers project. A survey was undertaken to establish whether the scholarly communication behaviours of the new wave of researchers are uniform, progressing, or changing in the same overall direction or whether they are impacted significantly by national and cultural differences. A multilingual questionnaire hosted on SurveyMonkey was distributed in 2019 via social media networks of researchers, academic publishers, and key ECR platforms in the UK, USA, France, China, Spain, Russia, Malaysia, and Poland. Over a thousand responses were obtained, and the main findings are that there is a significant degree of diversity in terms of scholarly communication attitudes and practices of ECRs from the various countries represented in the study, which cannot be solely explained by the different make‐up of the samples. China, Russia, France, and Malaysia were more likely to be different in respect to a scholarly activity, and responses from the UK and USA were relatively similar. Key points: ECRs from China, Russia, France, and Malaysia are more likely to hold different (although moderate) views in respect to a scholarly activity.ECRs from the UK and USA are similar in many respects, including being positive towards open science and relying less on external factors (impact factor or number of download) for their decision to read a paper.French ECRs appear not to want to do, abide, or follow anything novel or innovative and are very critical of scholarly developments.Spanish ECRs are innovative and more positive about publishing open access (OA), while Chinese ECRs are somewhat conservative as they are less likely to publish in OAChinese ECRs are the highest users of social media for testing and conducting research but least likely to use it to share their reputations or build reputations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Do public universities have more effective counselling services than private universities in Melaka?
- Author
-
Thuryrajah, Vemala, Ahmed, Elsadig Musa, and Nathan, Robert Jeyakumar
- Subjects
- *
COGNITION , *COLLEGE students , *COUNSELING , *ETHNIC groups , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *MATHEMATICAL variables , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: School counselling interventions have a substantial impact on students' educational and personal development. Individual and small group counselling, classroom guidance and consultation activities seem to contribute directly to students' success in the classroom and beyond. Aim: This paper attempted to study impact of counselling services in universities in Melaka state, Malaysia. Method: The research was carried out in four universities in Melaka, with a total sample of 564 students. Findings: The results showed that all research variables tested (awareness, resources, counsellor, management policy and effectiveness of counselling) were rated more highly in public universities than in private universities, with each variable achieving a p‐value of <.05. Implications: All research variables tested (awareness, resources, counsellor, management policy and effectiveness of counselling) were rated more highly in public universities than in private universities. It is possible that this is because public universities follow Act 580 of the Counselling Act, which makes it compulsory for public universities to have counsellors, while this is not the case for private universities. Employing a counsellor is an additional cost and it may be that there is more reluctance to invest in the welfare of students in the private sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Reconceptualizing Aunty as an address term in urban multilingual Malaysia.
- Author
-
Lee, Sarah and Shanmuganathan, Thilagavathi
- Subjects
- *
ENGLISH language , *MULTILINGUALISM , *LANGUAGE & languages , *ETHNICITY , *ADULTS , *HIGHER education - Abstract
This paper explores contact reconceptualizations of English Aunty as an address term in Greater Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. In this multiethnic and multilingual city, Aunty is used in local discourses to address older females across different languages and regardless of whether Addressee is related to the Addresser. Moreover, usage of Aunty is extensive, covering a range of social roles, identities, and interpersonal relations that reflect acculturations to a context where diverse traditional cultural norms, multilanguage mixing, and modernity effects, are simultaneously salient. Using the Cultural Linguistics framework (Sharifian, 2017a, 2017b), it is demonstrated that long‐established Malaysian cultural priorities, race (ethnicity) and modern as status (modernity values) can help account for the potential range of usages of Malaysian Aunty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Prevalence of awareness, ever‐use and current use of nicotine vaping products (NVPs) among adult current smokers and ex‐smokers in 14 countries with differing regulations on sales and marketing of NVPs: cross‐sectional findings from the ITC Project
- Author
-
Gravely, Shannon, Driezen, Pete, Ouimet, Janine, Quah, Anne C. K., Cummings, K. Michael, Thompson, Mary E., Boudreau, Christian, Hammond, David, McNeill, Ann, Borland, Ron, Thrasher, James F., Edwards, Richard, Omar, Maizurah, Hitchman, Sara C., Yong, Hua‐Hie, Barrientos‐Gutierrez, Tonatiuh, Willemsen, Marc C., Bianco, Eduardo, Boado, Marcelo, and Goma, Fastone Mathew
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRONIC cigarettes , *AWARENESS , *CIGARETTE smokers , *EX-smokers , *SALES policy , *NICOTINE , *MARKETING laws , *HEALTH , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SMOKING , *SURVEYS , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DISEASE prevalence , *CROSS-sectional method , *HEALTH literacy , *MIDDLE-income countries , *LOW-income countries , *LAW - Abstract
Aims: This paper presents updated prevalence estimates of awareness, ever‐use, and current use of nicotine vaping products (NVPs) from 14 International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation Project (ITC Project) countries that have varying regulations governing NVP sales and marketing. Design, Setting, Participants and Measurements: A cross‐sectional analysis of adult (≥ 18 years) current smokers and ex‐smokers from 14 countries participating in the ITC Project. Data from the most recent survey questionnaire for each country were included, which spanned the period 2013–17. Countries were categorized into four groups based on regulations governing NVP sales and marketing (allowable or not), and level of enforcement (strict or weak where NVPs are not permitted to be sold): (1) most restrictive policies (MRPs), not legal to be sold or marketed with strict enforcement: Australia, Brazil, Uruguay; (2) restrictive policies (RPs), not approved for sale or marketing with weak enforcement: Canada, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand; (3) less restrictive policies (LRPs), legal to be sold and marketed with regulations: England, the Netherlands, Republic of Korea, United States; and (4) no regulatory policies (NRPs), Bangladesh, China, Zambia. Countries were also grouped by World Bank Income Classifications. Country‐specific weighted logistic regression models estimated adjusted NVP prevalence estimates for: awareness, ever/current use, and frequency of use (daily versus non‐daily). Findings NVP awareness and use were lowest in NRP countries. Generally, ever‐ and current use of NVPs were lower in MRP countries (ever‐use = 7.1–48.9%; current use = 0.3–3.5%) relative to LRP countries (ever‐use = 38.9–66.6%; current use = 5.5–17.2%) and RP countries (ever‐use = 10.0–62.4%; current use = 1.4–15.5%). NVP use was highest among high‐income countries, followed by upper–middle‐income countries, and then by lower–middle‐income countries. Conclusions: With a few exceptions, awareness and use of nicotine vaping products varied by the strength of national regulations governing nicotine vaping product sales/marketing, and by country income. In countries with no regulatory policies, use rates were very low, suggesting that there was little availability, marketing and/or interest in nicotine vaping products in these countries where smoking populations are predominantly poorer. The higher awareness and use of nicotine vaping products in high income countries with moderately (e.g. Canada, New Zealand) and less (e.g. England, United States) restrictive policies, is likely due to the greater availability and affordability of nicotine vaping products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Hydrothermal liquefaction of Malaysia's algal biomass for high‐quality bio‐oil production.
- Author
-
Abdul Latif, Nor‐Insyirah Syahira, Ong, Mei Yin, and Nomanbhay, Saifuddin
- Subjects
- *
BIOMASS liquefaction , *ATMOSPHERIC carbon dioxide , *BIOMASS , *CLEAN energy , *PLANT biomass , *PLASTIC scrap recycling - Abstract
Currently, fossil materials form the majority of our energy and chemical source. Many global concerns force us to rethink about our current dependence on the fossil energy. Limiting the use of these energy sources is a key priority for most countries that pledge to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The application of biomass, as substitute fossil resources for producing biofuels, plastics and chemicals, is a widely accepted strategy for sustainable development. Aquatic plants including algae possess competitive advantages as biomass resources compared to the terrestrial plants in this current global situation. Bio‐oil production from algal biomass is technically and economically viable, cost competitive, requires no capacious lands and minimal water use and reduces atmospheric carbon dioxide. The aim of this paper is to review the potential of converting algal biomass, as an aquatic plant, into high‐quality crude bio‐oil through applicable processes in Malaysia. In particular, bio‐based materials and fuels from algal biomass are considered as one of the reliable alternatives for clean energy. Currently, pyrolysis and hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) are two foremost processes for bio‐oil production from biomass. HTL can directly convert high‐moisture algal biomass into bio‐oil, whereas pyrolysis requires feedstock drying to reduce the energy consumption during the process. Microwave‐assisted HTL, which can be conducted in aqueous environment, is suitable for aquatic plants and wet biomass such as algae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Desali‐nation: Techno‐diplomacy and hydraulic state restructuring through reverse osmosis membranes in Singapore.
- Author
-
Usher, Mark
- Subjects
- *
OCEAN , *WATER management , *OSMOSIS , *WATER resources development , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *ENGINEERING , *WATER shortages - Abstract
A sea change has occurred in global water management over the last two decades as previously unconventional technologies such as reverse osmosis membranes have been integrated into national supply networks. State‐led, highly politicised programmes of water resources development, characterised by large‐scale hydraulic infrastructure, centralised monopoly control and diplomatic negotiations, have been transformed in many regions by integrated systems supported by private engineering companies, constituting a new "technopolitical regime." Desalination in particular has become an expedient solution not only to the chronic problem of water scarcity but protracted geopolitical disputes over shared infrastructure. Engaging with literature on geopolitical materialism, technopolitics and the hydraulic state, this paper will examine how desalination has been developed in Singapore to depoliticise the water supply network, bringing into relation a different constellation of actors and enabling an alternative form of techno‐diplomacy. In the 1990s, imported water from Malaysia became increasingly vulnerable due to a worsening of diplomatic relations, therefore Singapore began to leverage on reverse osmosis to circumvent antagonistic, politically charged negotiations. The water authority was subsequently plugged into global industry networks, technologically and institutionally reconfiguring the state through integrated management, corporate intermediaries and strategic nodality. By 2060, reverse osmosis technology is expected to provide 85% of water supply, co‐producing, it is argued, an alternative state ontology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. One world is not enough: the structured phenomenology of lifestyle migrants in East Asia.
- Author
-
Stones, Rob, Botterill, Kate, Lee, Maggy, and O'Reilly, Karen
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *STRUCTURATION theory , *SOCIAL structure - Abstract
The paper is based on original empirical research into the lifestyle migration of European migrants, primarily British, to Thailand and Malaysia, and of Hong Kong Chinese migrants to Mainland China. We combine strong structuration theory (SST) with Heideggerian phenomenology to develop a distinctive approach to the interplay between social structures and the lived experience of migrants. The approach enables a rich engagement with the subjectivities of migrants, an engagement that is powerfully enhanced by close attention to how these inner lives are deeply interwoven with relevant structural contexts. The approach is presented as one that could be fruitfully adopted to explore parallel issues within all types of migration. As is intrinsic to lifestyle migration, commitment to a better quality of life is central to the East Asian migrants, but they seek an uncomplicated, physically enhanced texture of life, framed more by a phenomenology of prosaic well‐being than of self‐realization or transcendence. In spite of possessing economic and status privileges due to their relatively elite position within global structures the reality for a good number of the lifestyle migrants falls short of their prior expectations. They are subject to particular kinds of socio‐structural marginaliszation as a consequence of the character of their migration, and they find themselves relatively isolated and facing a distinct range of challenges. A comparison with research into various groups of migrants to the USA brings into relief the specificities of the socio‐structural positioning of the lifestyle migrants of the study. Those East Asian migrants who express the greatest sense of ease and contentment seem to be those who have responded creatively to the specific challenges of their socio‐structural situation. Often, this appears to have been achieved through understated but active involvements with their new settings and through sustaining focused transnational connections and relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. An attempt at implementing a holistic inclusive development model: Insights from Malaysia's land settlement scheme.
- Author
-
Mamat, Mohd Zufri, Ng, Boon‐Kwee, Azizan, Suzana Ariff, and Chang, Lee Wei
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *RURAL development , *SOCIAL development , *INDUSTRIALIZATION ,ECONOMIC conditions in Malaysia - Abstract
This paper examines the influences of Malaysia's Federation Land Development Authority (FELDA) scheme in fostering inclusive rural development. Based on the model of holistic inclusive development, the paper investigates the performance of FELDA from four perspectives: social development, industrialisation, modernisation and basic needs. The main findings of the study indicate that, to a large extent, the scheme has successfully stimulated both the social and economic development of the community. Nonetheless, establishing a strong trust, social cohesion and rapport between the public authorities and community remain the main challenges in determining the success of this state-led agenda. Moreover, keeping traditional values in the modern system will be the key principle for the sustainability of the programme if plans are made to adopt the scheme in other regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Re-thinking aliteracy: when undergraduates surrender their reading choices.
- Author
-
Chong, Su Li
- Subjects
- *
READING motivation , *READING interests , *BOOKS & reading , *UNDERGRADUATES , *LITERACY , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *ACADEMIC motivation , *HIGHER education - Abstract
This paper re-considers the concept of aliteracy by arguing that it is less about not reading than it is about choice, agency and context. By analysing findings from a study that examined undergraduates' reading experiences in a Malaysian university, this paper explores the complexities around how the undergraduates grappled with conflicting decisions. Through a phenomenological theoretical perspective and against the theoretical backdrop of domain specificity in reading motivation, this study utilised phenomenological interviews to draw out nine undergraduates' reading experience. The reading experience is understood in terms of their negotiation with institutionally imposed and personal-choice reading both as school students and as undergraduates. The past and more current reading experiences of two undergraduates who considered themselves highly and poorly motivated readers, respectively, were also juxtaposed. Findings from this study provide grounds to show that across different 'levels' of motivation and in school or post-school contexts, the undergraduates' motivation for reading is fragile because the reading choice is not a straightforward matter. This article concludes by suggesting a theoretical conceptualisation for why an able reader may surrender his or her reading choice. This study has implications for teachers and reading researchers who recognise the reading experience for its complexities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Are regional incomes in Malaysia converging?
- Author
-
Abdullah, Abdul Jabbar, Doucouliagos, Hristos, and Manning, Elizabeth
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC convergence , *INCOME inequality , *ECONOMIC development , *EXTERNALITIES , *POVERTY - Abstract
This paper analyses patterns in regional inequality within and between Malaysia's 14 states, drawing upon estimates of Kuznets/Williamson curves, σ- and β-convergence and spatial spillovers. The path of regional inequality contradicts Kuznets predictions. Regional inequality initially fell but has subsequently risen with further economic development. While Malaysian governments have been successful at reducing poverty, they have been unable to curtail regional inequality in the long run. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Kelabit Voice: Philippine-Type, Indonesian-Type or Something a Bit Different?
- Author
-
Hemmings, Charlotte
- Subjects
- *
KELABIT language , *AUSTRONESIAN languages , *ERGATIVE constructions , *MALAYAN languages , *LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
This paper examines a series of voice alternations in Kelabit, a Western Austronesian language of Northern Sarawak. Traditionally, Western Austronesian languages are subcategorised into 'Philippine-type' and 'Indonesian-type' on the basis of shared structural properties. This paper raises the question, however, of whether a two-way typology is sufficient to represent the variation within Austronesian voice systems. This comes in light of Aldridge's () claim that Western Austronesian languages have undergone a change from ergative to accusative alignment. If this is the case, we would expect to find evidence of intermediate stages in the transition. Consequently, an independent methodology for studying voice and alignment is proposed and applied to the Kelabit voice system. Comparing voices on morphological, syntactic, semantic and discourse levels yields some interesting findings. Firstly, it suggests that the Kelabit voice-system could represent a transition from ergative to accusative via the reanalysis of an antipassive construction as active voice. Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, it suggests the two-way typology is too narrow to capture all of the distinctions in Austronesian voice systems. Thus extending such an approach to the study of Austronesian voice more generally could prove significant when addressing wider questions, such as the theory of alignment shift. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. State-led talent return migration programme and the doubly neglected ' Malaysian diaspora': Whose diaspora, what citizenship, whose development?
- Author
-
Koh, Sin Yee
- Subjects
- *
DIASPORA , *CITIZENSHIP , *IMMIGRANTS , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This paper questions the assumptions of 'diaspora', 'citizenship' and 'development' underlying diaspora strategies targeting a specific pool of overseas Malaysian 'talent' migrants. I examine the Malaysian state's discursive attempts to construct a carefully contained economic 'diaspora'-the ' Malaysian diaspora'-through its talent return migration programme. In this process, there is a portion of the 'Malaysian diaspora', especially non- bumiputeras (sons of soil), who are doubly neglected and excluded: first, from access to full and equal citizenship (which arguably contributed to their emigration in the first place); and second, from eligibility and recognition to participate in Malaysia's talent return migration programme. However, recent political activism calling for electoral reform and overseas voting rights challenges state-constructed visions of the 'diaspora' and their expected roles in advancing 'development'. This paper concludes by highlighting questions raised by the Malaysian case, linking these explicitly to how diaspora strategies-as they have been conceived, practised and contested-challenge the broader Migration and Development paradigm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. On the matter of forgetting and 'memory returns'.
- Author
-
Muzaini, Hamzah
- Subjects
- *
MEMORY loss , *MEMORY , *EMOTIONAL trauma , *THOUGHT & thinking - Abstract
Much geographical attention is paid to issues of memory and its relationship to place. Yet, there has been less disciplinary interrogation of what goes on when one forgets. This paper argues that forgetting, as it involves active embodied, material and spatial practices of producing absences, is just as salient as its counterpart, and worthy of analysis on its own terms. Drawing on the personal experiences of individuals who went through the Second World War in Malaysia, this paper first examines individuals' strategies for obscuring if not obliterating memories that are personally traumatic and injurious to well-being. The paper then shows how these memories can re-emerge, frequently in an involuntary or unexpected fashion, despite attempts to render them passé. In doing so, the paper espouses forgetting as a 'productive' practice; yet such practice is frequently incomplete as materials limit - as well as support - explicit efforts to keep the past in the past. More broadly, it challenges the valorisation of 'presence' in human-landscape interactions to expose the ways 'absence' too is imbricated in the everyday milieu. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Bedbugs and Grasshoppers: Translation, Myth and the Becoming of the Nation-State.
- Author
-
Wong, Yoke‐Sum
- Subjects
- *
STATE, The , *MALAY language , *TRANSLATING & interpreting , *ENGLISH language , *NATIONALISM , *TWENTIETH century ,MALAYSIAN politics & government ,MALAYSIAN history - Abstract
How is literally, a nation translated? This paper looks at translation practices as historical process and practice rather than submitting them to causal explanations with respect to the constitution of the nation-state. It takes as its starting point, two contemporary Malay words negeri (province, state) and negara (country, nation-state) and how they once had opposing definitions. Working with over three hundred years of dictionaries and lexicons, mainly English- Malay dictionaries, the words negeri and negara were translated and defined very differently from current dictionaries - nor are they clarified today. What then happened to these words and how were they understood and translated over time, and in what possible context within the language of post-colonial nation-state formation? What do the processes of translation offer or convey that disrupts the singularity of nations and nationalism? Writings on translation do not necessarily shed any further clarity but they offer a space in which we can think about translating practices and what they enact in the narrative of the nation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Convergence and divergence of individual-level values: A study of Malaysian managers.
- Author
-
Terpstra‐Tong, Jane L. Y., Terpstra, Robert H., and Tee, Ding Ding
- Subjects
- *
RATING of executives , *EXECUTIVES , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *CHI-squared test , *PROBABILITY theory , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *SELF-perception , *SEX distribution , *SPIRITUALITY , *STATISTICS , *SURVEYS , *T-test (Statistics) , *DATA analysis , *CULTURAL values , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Malaysia is a multi-ethnic country with Malay, Chinese and Indian being the dominant ethnic groups. This paper investigates the three ethnic cultures in Malaysia by examining the individual-level values of managers and professionals. Based on 528 responses to a Schwartz Value Survey ( SVS) questionnaire, the paper identifies partial convergence of the value systems of Malay, Chinese and Indian people. It was found that the three ethnic groups do not differ significantly in the individualistic value dimensions of Self-enhancement and Openness-to-change. However, Malays are found to be more conservative and less self-transcendent than Chinese or Indians, while Chinese and Indians attribute the same importance to these two sets of values. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Pattern of suicides in 2009: Data from the National Suicide Registry Malaysia.
- Author
-
Ali, Nor Hayati, Zainun, Khairul Anuar, Bahar, Norharlina, Haniff, Jamaiyah, Hamid, Abdul Muneer, Bujang, Mohamad Adam Hj, and Mahmood, Mohd Shah
- Subjects
- *
SUICIDAL behavior , *SUICIDE statistics , *PSYCHIATRY , *PUBLIC health , *DEMOGRAPHIC research - Abstract
Introduction The National Suicide Registry Malaysia ( NSRM) is a nationwide system that captures data on completed suicides in Malaysia from all forensic departments under the purview of the Ministry of Health Malaysia. Methods This paper examines all suicidal deaths reported to the NSRM from 1 January 2009 to 31 December 2009. The relevant variables were recorded in the paper-based Case Report Form ( CRF) and then entered into the online reporting system for analysis. Results The overall suicide rate for 2009 was 1.18 per 100,000 population ( n = 328). The age range was 14-94 years, with a median of 37 ( IQR 24) years. There were more men than women, the gender ratio being 2.9:1 (males : females), and the majority (89% or 293/328) were Malaysian citizens. Ethnicity-wise, Indians had the highest suicide rate of 3.67 per 100,000. The Malays and Bumiputera of Sabah and Sarawak had lower rates of 0.32 to 0.37 per 100,000. Mental illness was reported in 22% (72/328) of the cases and physical illnesses in 20.4% (67/328). Previous suicide attempts were reported in 15.5% (51/328) of cases. History of substance abuse was present in 28.7% (83/328). Life events were positive in 41.2% (135/328) of cases. Discussion Malaysia is able to generate statistics on suicide by enhancing the collaboration between forensic, psychiatry and clinical research agencies. These trends should be monitored to gain a better understanding of suicide trends. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Modern Asian ecclesiastical interconnections: Catholic Tamil Nadu and its diaspora in Malaysia.
- Author
-
Pillai, Shanthini
- Subjects
- *
ASIAN Catholics , *TAMIL diaspora , *ETHNICITY , *TAMIL (Indic people) , *CIVILIZATION - Abstract
This paper explores the dynamics of the modern Asian Catholic ecclesiastical experience in Malaysia within the context of diaspora. Using the South Indian Tamil Catholic community in Malaysia as a case in point, I explore the mediations that occur in ecclesiastical spaces as a result of the points of contact between Catholic Tamil Nadu and its diaspora in Malaysia. Through an analysis of two festivals of ethnic Tamil heritage, the Feast of Our Lady of Good Health and the Pongal Festival, in a predominantly Tamil parish community, the discussion will show how the interactions between ethnicity, culture, and the Catholic Tamil diaspora in Malaysia foreground a sinuous interweaving of the threads of continuity, adaptation and dialogue. I also attempt to extend the investigation a little further to show instances of subtle differences that emerge as a result of the diasporic relocation of vernacular Catholicism inherited from South India. The latter subsequently reveal the modern Asian ecclesiastical interconnections that occur as South Indian Catholicism is practised within its national Malaysian Catholic context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Confusion over land rights and development opportunities through communal titles in Sabah, Malaysia.
- Author
-
Lunkapis, Gaim James
- Subjects
- *
LAND use , *RURAL development , *CONTENT analysis , *NATURAL resources , *CASE studies - Abstract
Confusion over land rights issues and opportunities created through communal titles may just be rhetoric to some, but for the poor rural communities, it is a matter of survival. As this paper reveals, this may be due to contradictory interpretations between native communities and state agencies of what constitutes native customary rights. The methods and materials used are based on case studies in the state of Sabah, Malaysia with regard to the policies, programmes and projects that have been implemented in rural areas. This was made possible through interviews with key informants, textual analyses and state documents, and through observations of projects implemented in the rural areas of Sabah. Based on the information gathered, this paper reveals a worrying pattern of state and peoples' interactions over the provision of communal titles and state projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Intercultural capacity deficits: Contested geographies of coexistence in natural resource management.
- Author
-
Howitt, Richard, Doohan, Kim, Suchet‐Pearson, Sandie, Cross, Sherrie, Lawrence, Rebecca, Lunkapis, Gaim James, Muller, Samantha, Prout, Sarah, and Veland, Siri
- Subjects
- *
CULTURAL relations , *NATURAL resources management , *ONTOLOGY , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *POLITICAL doctrines - Abstract
Focusing on the coexistence of competing and contested interests in intercultural natural resource management ( NRM) systems in Australia and Malaysia, this paper explores the ways in which ontological pluralism and the interplay of socio-cultural, political-economic and biophysical influences shape NRM systems. We aim to foster a discursive space in which to reframe the challenges of capacity building in the rapidly changing spaces of intercultural NRM systems. The paper synthesizes the conceptual arguments of field research to conclude that capacity deficits of dominant institutions, processes and knowledge systems drive many systemic failures in land and sea management affecting Indigenous peoples. We advocate urgent action to build intercultural competence and new capacities and competencies in those institutions. The paper reframes intercultural NRM in terms of coexistence and invites wider debate about these 'new geographies of coexistence' in intercultural NRM systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Theoretical rhetoric about migration networks: A case of a journey of Bangladeshi workers to Malaysia.
- Author
-
Ahsan Ullah, AKM
- Subjects
- *
BANGLADESHI foreign workers , *FOREIGN workers , *SOCIAL networks , *ECONOMIC impact of emigration & immigration , *TRAVEL - Abstract
This paper analyses the routes that Bangladeshi migrant workers take to get to Malaysia. This paper also tests the basic tenets and the applicability of networks theory with the empirical reality on the routes. In order to test it, the route negotiated by Bangladeshi migrant workers from Bangladesh to Malaysia is considered. Network theory proposes that migration, in terms of reduction of costs and mitigation of risks, is facilitated by networks. Data demonstrate that majority of the respondents had incurred exorbitant costs on their migration. To get to their destination, half of the respondents took around a month, a quarter of them took between one and two months, while a person traveling in a normal way could make the same air journey safely in three hours. En route they suffered many other severe adversities: such as starvation, maltreatment, and were forced to pass through deep jungles. Thus, this study directly challenges the theory by illustrating that despite their access to networks, their migration was marked by a lengthy, painful, and hazardous journey. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Transnational Migration, Gender, and Rights: Advocacy and Activism in the Malaysian Context.
- Author
-
Elias, Juanita
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN migrant labor , *HOUSEHOLD employees , *LEGAL status of migrant labor , *LABOR unions , *NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
This paper explores the intersection between gender and migration through an analysis of the advocacy strategies undertaken by Malaysian non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and trade unions on behalf of female transnational migrant workers. In particular, the paper looks at the different ways in which local NGOs and trade unions have engaged with the so-called 'rights-based approach' to migration that has been emphasized by transnational NGOs and key intergovernmental organizations - in particular the International Labour Organization (ILO). The paper suggests that despite the widespread feminization of migration in the region, the rights-based approach has tended to employ a gender-blind perspective on migration. It is only in the arena of activism around the rights of migrant domestic workers (an overwhelmingly feminized sector) that gender issues are brought to the fore of the migrant rights debate. The appropriation of rights-talk by activists organizing on behalf of migrant domestic workers does indicate that the language of human rights can be employed strategically in ways that place the concerns of women workers at their centre. However, there are significant limitations posed by the employment of a human rights 'master frame' by pro-migrant worker activists. These limitations include: the continued association between rights and gender-blind universal (labour) standards; the linkage between rights and 'public sphere' activities outside of the household realm; and the problematic relationship between universal notions of human rights and particularistic notions of citizenship under conditions of political authoritarianism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Enclaves and ethnic ties: The local impacts of Singaporean cross-border tourism in Malaysia and Indonesia.
- Author
-
Hampton, Mark P.
- Subjects
- *
TOURISM , *ECONOMIC development , *FOREIGN workers - Abstract
Cross-border tourism is often proposed by governments as an incentive for economic growth, but critics have suggested that its impacts are, in fact, overplayed. This paper presents research in the Indonesia-Malaysia-Singapore Growth Triangle (IMS-GT). It examines the broad economic impacts of Singaporean cross-border tourism on local host communities in two locations: Kukup, a traditional Malaysian fishing village in Johor, southern Peninsular Malaysia, and Bintan in Riau Islands Province in western Indonesia. The study found that cross-border tourism generated income, employment and some local economic linkages. In Kukup clear economic benefits with increased income and employment were unevenly distributed between ethnic groups. The Bintan enclave development had some linkages to the island economy but was reliant on immigrant labour. Cross-border ethnic ties, particularly Chinese, also played an important role in the growth of tourism in the IMS-GT. The paper shows that cross-border tourism can be a useful addition to more conventional forms of international tourism within national tourism planning and could lead to significant economic benefits for local communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Lexical borrowing from Chinese languages in Malaysian English.
- Author
-
IMM, TAN SIEW
- Subjects
- *
ENGLISH language in foreign countries , *CHINESE language , *LOANWORDS , *LINGUISTIC change , *LEXICOLOGY , *LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
This paper explores how contact between English and Chinese has resulted in the incorporation of Chinese borrowings into the lexicon of Malaysian English (ME). Using a corpus-based approach, this study analyses a comprehensive range of borrowed features extracted from the Malaysian English Newspaper Corpus (MEN Corpus). Based on the contexts of these features, the specific processes that shape the patterns of changes in ME are deduced. Haugen's analysis of lexical borrowing is employed in the description of the linguistic changes. It is proposed that the preservation of traditional Chinese culture and practices by a multilingual society that maintains a local variety of English has created the stimulus for this type of contact phenomenon. Borrowers are conditioned not only by their need to expand the communicative and expressive powers of English but also by their need to integrate the borrowed features into the linguistic system of the English language. The outcomes of this phenomenon, as represented in the relatively formal genre of newspaper English, are mainly loanwords, compound blends and loan translations, although some inflected and derived forms based on these borrowings are also observed. This paper demonstrates the potential of corpus-based methods in the study of new Englishes from the perspective of contact linguistics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Seeking knowledge, discovering learning: Uncovering the impetus for baccalaureate nursing studies in Malaysian Borneo.
- Author
-
Birks, Melanie, Francis, Karen, and Chapman, Ysanne
- Subjects
- *
NURSING education , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *BACHELOR of arts degree , *BACHELOR of science degree - Abstract
Changes to the nursing profession over recent decades have provoked an increasing migration of nursing education into the tertiary sector. For nurses who live and work in developing nations, such as Malaysia, opportunities for further study might be limited, particularly for those located in more remote regions. This paper reports on a research study of registered nurses who undertook baccalaureate degree studies in off-campus mode in Malaysian Borneo. A grounded theory methodology was employed in this research, which is part of a larger study into the nature and outcomes of change experienced as a result of postregistration degree studies. This paper explores the reasons why nurses in this location enrolled in one such course and the extent to which completion of their studies addressed their motivational goals. The findings indicate that the experience of learning and acquisition of knowledge was well beyond what was expected, resulting in a sense of achievement that was similarly unanticipated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Transnationalism and Agency in East Malaysia: Filipina Migrants in the Nightlife Industries.
- Author
-
Hilsdon, Anne-Marie
- Subjects
- *
TRANSNATIONALISM , *WOMEN foreign workers , *FILIPINO women , *WOMEN immigrants , *FRIENDSHIP , *MARRIAGE , *ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
East Malaysia's vibrant nightlife is a lucrative industry employing many Filipina migrants. The paper addresses the impact on Filipinas of discursive regimes of work, the state and family. These are derived from national discourses of ethnicity, class and nation intertwined with dominant discourses of womanhood in both Malaysia and the Philippines. The paper argues that in transnational space disciplinary regimes are heavily constraining, but resistance and negotiation are possible. The paper follows a feminist poststructuralist approach, which finds that disciplinary forces, rather than being coercive, are subtly inculcated in the migrant subject. Embodiment is never absolute and everyday actions of women initiate instability in the category 'Woman'. This offers the opportunity for agency. Ethnographic methods are used to explore the tensions and constraints of the Filipinas' everyday experience of migration. In the setting of a largely non-Muslim East Malaysia, ethnic identity seems differently constructed than in a predominantly Muslim Peninsula Malaysia. Through friendship and marriage with Malaysians, and integration into local communities, Filipinas are able to resist and negotiate their migrant status. The actions of Filipinas and their local Malaysian partners contest conservative notions of ethnicity, gender, class and nation in both the Philippines and Malaysia. This offers a potential for agency for Filipinas, the possibility for which could also extend to the largely non-Muslim local Malaysians with whom they share their lives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.