: The role of the state in shaping ethnic and civic identity in Singapore and Malaysia
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2014
DISSERTATION (THESIS) NOTE
Text preceding or following the note
2014
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
This dissertation examines how states actions shape the effects of ethnic diversity. Specifically, the three constituent chapters demonstrate the ability of public policies and political institutions in Singapore and Malaysia to alter key aspects of inter- and intra-ethnic interaction among their respective populations. The findings provide evidence for the extensive role that political activity plays in how ethnic diversity manifests itself across a range of contexts. The first chapter examines the impact of Singapore's National Service program on the ethnic and civic identities of conscripts. It isolates the effects of the program by exploiting a natural experiment that introduces exogenous variation in the intensity of socialization and contact between conscripts of different ethnicities. It finds that conscripts exposed to higher levels of socialization and contact demonstrate higher salience of potentially unifying civic identities and lower salience of potentially divisive ethnic identities. These effects are remarkably durable, as they remain observable in former conscripts who completed their National Service decades ago. The findings demonstrate the significant potential of public policy to shape patterns of inter- and intra-ethnic behavior through socialization and inducing contact between citizens. The second chapter examines the impact of Malaysia's electoral rules on the politicization of ethnicity. It demonstrates that the country's dominant political party has sought to secure its grip on power through the use of malapportionment, which concentrates electoral influence in a relatively narrow segment of the electorate. The disproportionate importance of this group to electoral outcomes has led the government to maintain policies that ensure its support--in this case, policies that increase the salience of ethnic divisions--despite their deleterious effects on national cohesion. The chapter provides insights into why ethnically divisive policies and rhetoric are deeply entrenched in Malaysia. The third chapter examines the impact of Malaysia's divisive policies and highly politicized ethnic cleavages at the micro-level. Using survey experiments, it demonstrates that the state's actions, together with inherent ambiguities in the Malay identity, have fundamentally altered the nature of the Malay ethnic identity by imbuing it with an explicitly political component. Two surveys provide evidence that large segments of the general population use political affiliation in their ethnic categorization of self- identifying Malays. This finding makes two important contributions. From a theoretical perspective, it challenges existing conceptualization of ethnic identity, which assume that only descent-based attributes are used as criteria for ethnic group membership. From a practical perspective, it demonstrates at a micro-level how politicizing ethnic identity can increase the intensity of ethnic conflict