Murdoch University Research Repository

Welcome to the Murdoch University Research Repository

The Murdoch University Research Repository is an open access digital collection of research
created by Murdoch University staff, researchers and postgraduate students.

Learn more

Gestural politics: Civil society in "new" Singapore

Lee, T.ORCID: 0000-0003-3333-0076 (2005) Gestural politics: Civil society in "new" Singapore. Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia, 20 (2). pp. 132-154.

Link to Published Version: https://doi.org/10.1355/SJ20-2B
*Subscription may be required

Abstract

This paper offers a short "history" of the term and discourse of civil society in Singapore: from its promulgation by then Minister of information and the Arts (MITA) George Yeo as "civic" society (in the 1990s) to its reassertion as a government vision statement calling for "active citizenship" and public participation and "feedback" (from 1999). In 2004, in the lead-up to the installation of the city-state's third Prime Minister, Lee Hsien Loong, civil society has been re-framed and re-branded with political buzzwords like "openness" and "inclusiveness". This paper argues that while to some extent, engagement with the concept of civil society has become a political necessity in the "new" Singapore, the appropriation and propagation of such new rhetoric remains by and large gestural. In the final analysis, this paper posits that gestural politics — where the "liberal gestures" of the regime is more important than its substance — remains the most meaningful way of understanding the role and direction of civil society in Singapore.

Item Type: Journal Article
Murdoch Affiliation(s): School of Media, Communication and Culture
Publisher: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies
URI: http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/10019
Item Control Page Item Control Page