{"id":208,"date":"2020-08-12T14:18:29","date_gmt":"2020-08-12T14:18:29","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fass.nus.edu.sg\/srn\/?page_id=208"},"modified":"2020-08-24T06:19:46","modified_gmt":"2020-08-24T06:19:46","slug":"faculty","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/fass.nus.edu.sg\/srn\/faculty\/","title":{"rendered":"Faculty"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2>\n\t\tFaculty Publications\n\t<\/h2>\n\t<p><strong>Listing of faculty publications on Singapore with available abstracts and links<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Please search below from our database of more than 8,000 Singapore-related publications. Updates with abstracts and additions of new publications are ongoing. To search more effectively, please use the MLA or APA citation style which uses the author\u2019s last name and initials.<\/p>\n\t<form method='post' action='' id='form-publications-filter'><div class='row'><div class='col-12 col-lg-5'><input type='text' class='form-control' name='publicationstext' id='publicationstext' placeholder='Search Title\/Author' value=''\/><\/div><div class='col-12 col-lg-3'><select name='facultydepartment-category' id='facultydepartment-category' class='form-control' ><option value='0'>Department<\/option><option value='38'>Centre for Language Studies<\/option><option value='39'>Chinese Studies<\/option><option value='40'>Communications and New Media<\/option><option value='41'>Economics<\/option><option value='42'>English, Linguistics and Theatre Studies<\/option><option value='43'>Geography<\/option><option value='44'>History<\/option><option value='45'>Japanese Studies<\/option><option value='46'>Malay Studies<\/option><option value='47'>Other FASS Department<\/option><option value='48'>Philosophy<\/option><option value='49'>Political Science<\/option><option value='50'>Psychology<\/option><option value='51'>Social Work<\/option><option value='52'>Sociology and Anthropology<\/option><option value='53'>South Asian Studies<\/option><option value='54'>Southeast Asian Studies<\/option><\/select><\/div><div class='col-12 col-lg-2'><select name='perpage' id='perpage' class='form-control'><option value='0'>Show<\/option><option value='20'>20<\/option><option value='50'>50<\/option><option value='100'>100<\/option><\/select><\/div><div class='col-12 col-lg-2'><input type=\"submit\" id=\"search-submit\"\/><input type=\"hidden\" value=\"1\" id=\"pagenumber\" name=\"pagenumber\"\/><\/div><\/div><\/form>\n\t<div id='publications-listing-widget'><div class='row'><div class='fl-col col-12'><div class='publications-block'><a href='https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1080\/14631369.2023.2216881'><strong>Strategic races: understanding racial categories in Japanese-occupied Singapore<\/strong><\/a> by Eaton, C.<br\/>Asian Ethnicity, 24(4), 505\u2013522.<br\/><strong>Department(s):<\/strong> Japanese Studies<br\/> <button type='button' onclick='javascript:showDescription(\"description35930\");'>Description<\/button><div id='description35930' style='display:none;'>This paper examines Japanese policies toward different races (minzoku) in Singapore during the Second World War. These policies, which victimized the Chinese community and appeared to favor others such as the Malay and Indian communities, fostered inter-racial resentments that would persist long after the war. Drawing on internal occupation guidelines produced by the Japanese state and the accounts of the administrators who implemented them, this paper shows that the treatment of the Chinese community was in fact a direct result of the perceived significance of these groups to the success or failure of Japan\u2019s wartime imperial project in Southeast Asia. Groups whose importance the Japanese initially dismissed, however, had greater freedom to chart their own destinies and demand Japan live up to its promise of an \u201cAsia for Asians\u201d as the war progressed.<\/div><hr\/><\/div><\/div><div class='fl-col col-12'><div class='publications-block'><a href='https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1016\/j.ufug.2025.129161'><strong>The limits of green spaces: When other amenities lead in social ties<\/strong><\/a> by Chua, V., Tan, P. Y., Adelia, A. S., &amp; Samsudin, R.<br\/>Urban Forestry &amp; Urban Greening, 114, 129161.<br\/><strong>Department(s):<\/strong> Sociology and Anthropology<br\/> <button type='button' onclick='javascript:showDescription(\"description35928\");'>Description<\/button><div id='description35928' style='display:none;'>Green spaces are often seen as fostering social cohesion, yet their effects are not uniform. This study examines how neighbourhood context and resident characteristics shape the link between green spaces and community ties. Drawing on survey data from two contrasting Singaporean towns\u2014Punggol, a newer estate with extensive greenery but fewer amenities, and Toa Payoh, a mature town with dense networks of shops and community facilities\u2014we assess both the role of green spaces and the influence of other infrastructures. Three findings stand out. First, residents with strong place attachment gain limited additional benefit from greenery, as their ties are already maintained through everyday encounters. Second, in amenity-rich, walkable neighbourhoods such as Toa Payoh, non-green infrastructures substitute for greenery\u2019s community-building role, while in Punggol, green spaces are central to fostering ties. Third, green spaces are particularly effective for lower-SES residents in Punggol, whose mobility and access to alternatives are more limited. These results show that the social value of green infrastructure is highly contextual and depends on existing neighbourhood features, rather than being uniform across settings.<\/div><hr\/><\/div><\/div><div class='fl-col col-12'><div class='publications-block'><a href='https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1093\/geronb\/gbaf090'><strong>From Digital Divide to Digital Equality: The Role of Learning in Older Singaporeans<\/strong><\/a> by Mo, Y., Liu, Y., Yeung, W.-J. J., Koh, W.-P., Gu, D., &amp; Feng, Q. <br\/>The Journals of Gerontology, Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, 80(7), gbaf090. https<br\/><strong>Department(s):<\/strong> Sociology and Anthropology<br\/> <button type='button' onclick='javascript:showDescription(\"description35904\");'>Description<\/button><div id='description35904' style='display:none;'>The role of information and communication technology (ICT) in later life has received substantial attention, with continuous studies focusing on the digital divide for older persons. Literature usually defines and measures the digital divide by focusing on ICT accessibility, skills, and outcomes. This study attempted to expand this framework by further incorporating the role of learning for a more comprehensive perspective of understanding the digital divide at older ages.<br \/>\r\n<br \/>\r\nWe chose the case of Singapore, a society with the highest level of ICT accessibility in the world, to reveal the necessity of introducing this new dimension. With a sample of 2,545 older adults from the Lifelong Education for Aging Productively survey in Singapore, we utilized the latent class analysis (LCA) to categorize 16 indicator variables across 3 core dimensions of the digital gap in daily life: usage, utility, and learning.<br \/>\r\n<br \/>\r\nThe LCA revealed 4 distinct groups: adept users, intermediate users, basic users, and traditional users. 12.9% of older individuals in Singapore were classified as traditional users, characterized by only using landlines and mobile phones for communication with little learning motivation, uncovering a deeper digital gap in Singapore under the new scheme. Regression analyses further showed the strong impacts of socioeconomic status on these types of ICT users.<br \/>\r\n<br \/>\r\nThis study not only underscores the need to highlight the role of learning in understanding the evolving nature of the digital gap but also calls for more significant policy interventions to enhance ICT learning toward digital equity.<\/div><hr\/><\/div><\/div><div class='fl-col col-12'><div class='publications-block'><a href='https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1177\/10778012241283498'><strong>Detrimental to Our Digital Well-Being: Campus Sexual Misconduct and Technology- Facilitated Sexual Violence Among University Students in Singapore<\/strong><\/a> by Ho, M. H. S., Gupta, S., Lee, J., Wadhwa, B., &amp; Fu, X.<br\/>Violence against women, 31(14), 3603\u20133631.<br\/><strong>Department(s):<\/strong> Communications and New Media<br\/> <button type='button' onclick='javascript:showDescription(\"description35869\");'>Description<\/button><div id='description35869' style='display:none;'>Although increasingly prevalent in Singapore, campus sexual assault and harassment and technology-facilitated sexual violence (TFSV) remain underresearched. Conducted by scholars across social work, gender studies, policy studies, communication, and computer science, this interdisciplinary study explores the impact of technologies such as social media and online platforms on the digital well-being of university students in Singapore who experience TFSV and campus sexual misconduct. We conducted online surveys with 314 students and interviews with 28 students, the majority of whom were women and identified as victim-survivors. Our analysis revealed participants did not perceive technologies as entirely detrimental and possessed limited awareness of digital well-being. These findings contribute to understanding young victim-survivors' digital well-being and relationship to technology in Singapore by highlighting the experiences of college students.<\/div><hr\/><\/div><\/div><div class='fl-col col-12'><div class='publications-block'><a href='https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1080\/1369183X.2025.2544084'><strong>Migration narratives in Singapore: from economistic imperatives to counter-narratives and absent narratives on co-ethnic politics and managing migrants<\/strong><\/a> by Lynn-Ee Ho, E. <br\/>Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 51(18), 4687\u20134705. <br\/><strong>Department(s):<\/strong> Geography<br\/> <button type='button' onclick='javascript:showDescription(\"description35774\");'>Description<\/button><div id='description35774' style='display:none;'>By engaging conceptually with the scholarship on narrative analysis and bringing it into dialogue with research on migration narratives, this paper contrasts prevailing economistic narratives on migration with \u2018counter-narratives\u2019 (on co-ethnic migration) and \u2018absent\u2019 narratives (on ageing migrants). Discussions of migration in Singapore have predominantly centred on skills and wealth differences. Alongside these economistic depictions of migration governance, the politics of co-ethnicity (between past and present migrants from the same source countries) have begun to visibly shape migration and citizenship contestations. Just as important \u2013 but hitherto minimally discussed \u2013 are less visibly surfaced narratives concerning how different cohorts of migrants are ageing in Singapore. The paper uses news reports, government speeches, social media discussions, arts and cultural sources and wider academic literature to develop the arguments. The discussion demonstrates how competing narratives interact to exhibit the uneven power relations of migration governance. These findings signal that counter-narratives which challenge migration governance can become surfaced in mainstream narratives and trigger policy changes if they are aligned with the master narrative of national belonging. However, narratives that champion the wellbeing of temporary migrants tend to be subsumed or relegated to the informal domain.<\/div><hr\/><\/div><\/div><div class='fl-col col-12'><div class='publications-block'><a href='https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1080\/1362704X.2024.2377506'><strong>Singapore Fashion Histories \u2013 Developing an Open-Access Fashion History Website<\/strong><\/a> by Tay, J., Wong, A., &amp; Yap, W. <br\/>Singapore Fashion Histories \u2013 Developing an Open-Access Fashion History Website. Fashion Theory, 28(5\u20136), 635\u2013648.<br\/><strong>Department(s):<\/strong> Communications and New Media<br\/> <button type='button' onclick='javascript:showDescription(\"description35769\");'>Description<\/button><div id='description35769' style='display:none;'>This article showcases and explains the process, and the rationale behind the Singapore Fashion Histories website -- an iterative collaborative fashion media site that is dedicated to understanding Singapore's national fashion history. Sponsored by the National Heritage Board, this project takes a multi-sited approach to fashion history in Singapore, one that incorporates and insists on a multiple layering of understanding of what fashion means to a nation.<\/div><hr\/><\/div><\/div><div class='fl-col col-12'><div class='publications-block'><a href='https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1080\/23801883.2023.2280082'><strong>Three Questions About the Early British Port of Singapore, c.1819\u20131830<\/strong><\/a> by Borschberg, P. <br\/>Global Intellectual History, 8(6), 789\u2013815.<br\/><strong>Department(s):<\/strong> History<br\/> <button type='button' onclick='javascript:showDescription(\"description35735\");'>Description<\/button><div id='description35735' style='display:none;'>This article examines the evolution of trade policies in early British Singapore from its founding in 1819 to about 1830. By focusing on this timeframe, it aims to shed light on the important shifts that occurred during this formative period. The article addresses three issues that are key to understanding the trajectory of early British Singapore. First, it explores the reasons behind the dissolution of the original power- and revenue-sharing arrangements between the British, the Temenggong, and Sultan Hussain by 1824. By investigating the reasons behind this termination, the article seeks to uncover the power struggles that (re-) shaped early governance in Singapore. Second, the article examines the roles played by traditional Malay commercial conventions and practices. As a result, a more multi-faceted understanding emerges of Singapore's commercial and cultural origins. Finally, the article investigates the driving forces behind the establishment of British Singapore as a free port supported by free trade. By exploring the motivation, timing and debates about policy, the article provides insights into the economic and political factors that propelled Singapore\u2019s rise as a trading hub. The conclusions in this article offer a thought-provoking reassessment and reframing of Singapore\u2019s early development as a port and British settlement.<\/div><hr\/><\/div><\/div><div class='fl-col col-12'><div class='publications-block'><a href='http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3998\/mpub.12333333.7'><strong>State Institutions in South Malaysia: Singapore\u2019s Entry and Exit, 1963\u201365<\/strong><\/a> by Ong, E. <br\/>State Institutions in South Malaysia: Singapore\u2019s Entry and Exit, 1963\u201365. In A. H. Liu &amp; J. S. Selway (Eds.), State Institutions, Civic Associations, and Identity Demands: Regional Movements in Greater Southeast Asia (pp. 23\u201337). University of Michigan Press.<br\/><strong>Department(s):<\/strong> Political Science<br\/> <button type='button' onclick='javascript:showDescription(\"description35723\");'>Description<\/button><div id='description35723' style='display:none;'>This chapter focuses on how Singapore\u2019s under-representation in the Malaysian state institutions resulted in an<br \/>\r\nextreme outcome. The Chinese-dominant People\u2019s Action Party (PAP) employed two strategies to protect regional interests\u2014which were inclusive of Chinese ethnic interests. Frustrated with limited political representation at the national level, the PAP championed itself as the Chinese partner to be in the ruling coalition. When these overtures<br \/>\r\nwere rebuked, the PAP forged an alternative multiethnic coalition. The Alliance Party saw the PAP\u2019s ability to regroup in in its demands as a threat. And while the PAP was successful in extracting greater autonomy over its regional affairs, it came at an expected price: separation from the federation.<\/div><hr\/><\/div><\/div><div class='fl-col col-12'><div class='publications-block'><a href='https:\/\/journals.sagepub.com\/doi\/10.1177\/09579265241313061'><strong>\u2018Hopefully this will be a wake-up call on how we treat migrant workers\u2019: National wokeness in press reports during the Covid-19 pandemic<\/strong><\/a> by Lazar, M. M.; Wang, W.; Tham, A.<br\/>Discourse &amp; Society, 36, 6.<br\/><strong>Department(s):<\/strong> English, Linguistics and Theatre Studies<br\/> <button type='button' onclick='javascript:showDescription(\"description35664\");'>Description<\/button><div id='description35664' style='display:none;'>This study examines how Singapore\u2019s flagship newspaper, The Straits Times (ST), framed relationships between migrant workers (MWs) and non-state actors (NGOs, companies and individuals) during the Covid-19 pandemic. We propose the conceptual lens of national wokeness as a mediatisation strategy of positive self-presentation to overcome international criticisms concerning the outbreak of the Covid-19 virus amidst neglected MW dormitories, and to repair the nation\u2019s reputational damage. The study identifies five key discursive themes: Provision, Participation, Awareness, Inclusiveness and Humanisation; the analysis of which shows different shades of wokeness in narrativising Singaporeans\u2019 emergent social consciousness and benevolent efforts to address unmet health and social needs arising from the marginalised status of MWs in Singapore. This study shows how the pandemic offered a rare moment for a nation to pause and potentially reset its apathetic, racist and classist attitudes towards its MWs, and raises for reflection Singaporeans\u2019 longer-term commitment to social change concerning MWs\u2019 welfare after the pandemic passes.<\/div><hr\/><\/div><\/div><div class='fl-col col-12'><div class='publications-block'><a href='https:\/\/www.tandfonline.com\/doi\/full\/10.1080\/17450101.2024.2395415'><strong>Ethnic proximity, mobility and (non)-belonging: middle-class Singaporean migrants in China<\/strong><\/a> by Ang, S.; Thang, L. L.; Ho, E. L.-E.<br\/>Mobilities, 20, 1, 207\u2013221.<br\/><strong>Department(s):<\/strong> Japanese Studies<br\/> <button type='button' onclick='javascript:showDescription(\"description35662\");'>Description<\/button><div id='description35662' style='display:none;'>This article examines how middle-class Singaporean migrants in China negotiate mobility, belonging, and non-belonging through experiences of ethnic proximity. Drawing on qualitative research, it shows how ethnic similarity can both enable mobility and produce ambivalence in everyday encounters, shaped by class, temporality, and situational contexts. The study contributes to debates on middling migration, mobile belonging, and the uneven effects of ethnic proximity in transnational settings.<\/div><hr\/><\/div><\/div><div class='fl-col col-12'><div class='publications-block'><a href='https:\/\/www.tandfonline.com\/doi\/full\/10.1080\/15528014.2025.2498175'><strong>On the qualia of sensory food heritage in Singapore<\/strong><\/a> by Low, K. E. Y.<br\/>Food, Culture &amp; Society, OnlineFirst.<br\/><strong>Department(s):<\/strong> Sociology and Anthropology<br\/> <button type='button' onclick='javascript:showDescription(\"description35660\");'>Description<\/button><div id='description35660' style='display:none;'>This paper explores the intimate links between food and foodways, sensory experiences, and the manufacturing and sustenance of food heritage in Singapore. Drawing upon a larger project that examined food heritage practices and commensality in two ethnic enclaves, the article focuses on how the senses and their accompanying qualic evaluations play a vital role in food heritage constructions that traverse across different scales of experience and analysis. The broad aim here is to illustrate how food heritage is embodied, participatory, and reconstructed, and shifts across temporalities and varying contexts. By raising sensory awareness that is embroiled within processes of experiencing and reenacting food heritage, such cognizance throws light onto one\u2019s identity, sense of belonging, and connections to place and nation. The senses are therefore catalytic in pronouncing what food heritage entails, and how one may go about tasting archives and eating heritage.<\/div><hr\/><\/div><\/div><div class='fl-col col-12'><div class='publications-block'><a href='https:\/\/www.taylorfrancis.com\/chapters\/oa-edit\/10.5117\/9789463722483_CH13\/changi-airport-making-nonaligned-singapore-neoliberalism-neutrality-cold-war-ying-kit-chan'><strong>Changi Airport and the Making of Nonaligned Singapore: Neoliberalism and Neutrality during the Cold War<\/strong><\/a> by Chan, Y.-k.<br\/>The Cityscapes of Taipei, Hong Kong, and Singapore during the Cold War, 21. Routledge.<br\/><strong>Department(s):<\/strong> Chinese Studies<br\/> <button type='button' onclick='javascript:showDescription(\"description35657\");'>Description<\/button><div id='description35657' style='display:none;'>In this chapter, I examine the transformation of Singapore Changi Airport as a result of regional competition during the Cold War. Tracing Singapore\u2019s ambition to become a regional center of investments, tourism, and air traffic, I challenge the conventional understanding of the Cold War as a geopolitical conflict by examining the economic yet peaceful rivalry between two supposed allies in the anticommunist camp through the lens of airports. Ultimately, I suggest that Singapore Changi Airport, with the phallic architecture that is its control tower, was a subtle beacon of peace that helped resolve tensions and facilitate cross-cultural connections\u2014even international cooperation\u2014during the purportedly tense Cold War.<\/div><hr\/><\/div><\/div><\/div><\/div><div class='row'><div class='col-12'><div class='pagination'><div class='fl-row-fixed-width fl-row'><div class='fl-col col-md-12 col-12'><div class='page-buttons'><ul class='pagination'><li class='page-item current-pagination-item'><a class='page-link' href='javascript:keepPages(1)''>1<\/a><\/li><li class='page-item'><a class='page-link' href='javascript:keepPages(2)'>2<\/a><\/li><li class='page-item'><a class='page-link' href='javascript:keepPages(3)'>3<\/a><\/li><li class='page-item'><a class='page-link' href='javascript:keepPages(4)'>4<\/a><\/li><li class='page-item'><a class='page-link' href='javascript:keepPages(5)'>5<\/a><\/li><li class='page-item'><a 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