Covid-19, Conflict, and Uncertainties in Malaysia
Buch, Englisch, 210 Seiten, Format (B × H): 148 mm x 210 mm, Gewicht: 301 g
ISBN: 978-981-99-6825-1
Verlag: Springer Nature Singapore
This book focuses on the discourse of de-globalisation in Malaysia by looking at the implications of this process politically, economically, socially, and environmentally.
The rise of right-wing political parties and a decline in global economic interdependence have rapidly fuelled the de-globalisation process by creating conflicts and uncertainties in many parts of the world. The battle against the Covid-19 pandemic has spurred a great challenge among the global community, thus becoming a catalyst in the de-globalising process worldwide. While there have been contested opinions on whether we are now in the temporary phase of de-globalisation, what is clear is that the pandemic adds momentum to the trend. Now that the world has entered the post-Covid-19 phase, is the discourse of de-globalisation still relevant?Since the emergence of this pandemic, Malaysia has been facing not only a change of government but also a rapid decline in its economy, a rise in unemployment and living costs, with the human rights situation deteriorating as the State of Emergency was imposed. All of these add up to a shift toward de-globalisation. Chapters in this book, therefore, engage with this issue from different perspectives, such as conventional warfare, bio-constitutional implications to the right to health, labour, migrants and refugees, digital education, indigenous people and so forth.
Zielgruppe
Research
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Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Part I: Deglobalisation in Malaysia as a subject of theoretical study.- Chapter 1: Introduction: Reconsidering (de)globalisation in the aftermath of Covid-19.- Chapter 2: Political and socioeconomic intersections in a deglobalising Malaysia.- Chapter 3: Malaysia’s defensive priority dilemma: Prioritising military strategy amidst Covid-19-mediated deglobalisation.- Chapter 4: An antidote to deglobalisation: Conceptualising youth activism in Malaysia.- Part II: Deglobalisation’s biopolitical implications for Malaysians.- Chapter 5: Bio-constitutionalism, power relations and endemic inequalities: Implications of the commodification of the right to health in a deglobalising Malaysia.- Chapter 6: Labour issues in Malaysia amidst deglobalisation.- Chapter 7: Mediated xenophobia and Covid-19: A critical discourse analysis of media representations of migrant workers in Malaysia.- Chapter 8: Political and social deglobalisation in Malaysia: Discrimination against migrants and refugees during the Covid-19 pandemic.- Part III: Deglobalisation in Sabah.- Chapter 9: Skewed priorities in Sabah’s food policies: (Post-)pandemic mediated deglobalisation and food security.- Chapter 10: Digital poverty and inequality during the Covid-19 pandemic in Keningau, Sabah.- Chapter 11: Lockdowns and food security: Embodying native wisdom in rice production among the indigenous Lundayeh in Sabah