Ethnic Relations in Peninsular Malaysia: The Cultural and Economic Dimensions

Ethnic Relations in Peninsular Malaysia: The Cultural and Economic Dimensions
Lee Hock Guan, author
Date of publication:  October 2000
Number of pages:  39
Code:  WPSC1/0

About the publication

This paper looks at the changing ethnic relations in Peninsular Malaysia in terms of the interactions between the states policies to advance Malay cultural dominance and reduce ethnic economic inequality and the aspirations and actions of the Chinese community. The state of ethnic relations partly will depend on whether the majority of the ethnic members, in particular the ethnic elites, are pursuing separatist or amalgamative strategies and goals, and on whether the rival ethnic groups stand in positions of marked inequality or near equality to each other. In this sense, since the 1969 ethnic riots, ethnic relations have eluded outright conflicts in part because the rival ethnic communities have pursued mainly amalgamative strategies and goals, and in part because the economic inequality gap has narrowed between the Malays and non-Malays. However, the expanding place of Islam in the Malay personal, and hence collective, identity and the relative success in making social classes more multiethnic have added additional complexities to the future of ethnic relations.
          

Contents

  • Ethnic Relations in Peninsular Malaysia: The Cultural and Economic Dimensions
    [Whole Publication]

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