Commercially arranged marriage and the negotiation of citizenship rights among Vietnamese marriage migrants in multiracial Singapore
Globalization and increased mobilities have multiplied cross-border transactions not only in the economic sphere but have also a major impact on human relationships of intimacy. This can be seen in the increased volume of differently mediated forms of international marriage, not just straddling ...
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Published in: | Asian ethnicity Vol. 14; no. 2; pp. 139 - 156 |
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Abstract | Globalization and increased mobilities have multiplied cross-border transactions not only in the economic sphere but have also a major impact on human relationships of intimacy. This can be seen in the increased volume of differently mediated forms of international marriage, not just straddling 'east' and 'west', but within Asia and across different ethnicities and nationalities. International marriage raises a host of social issues for countries of origin and destination, including challenges relating to the citizenship status and rights of the marriage migrant. This paper examines the negotiation of citizenship rights in the case of commercially matched marriage migrants - namely Vietnamese women who marry Singaporean men and migrate to Singapore as 'foreign brides'. While they are folded into the 'family' - what is often thought of as the basic building block of the nation in Asian societies - they are not necessarily accorded full incorporation into the 'nation' despite Singapore's claims to multiculturalism. This is particularly salient at a point when cross-nationality, cross-ethnicity marriages between Singapore citizens and non-citizens are on the increase, accounting for over a third of marriages registered in Singapore in recent years. Vietnamese women who marry Singaporeans are positioned within the nation-state's citizenship regime as dependents of Singaporean men, having to rely on the legitimacy of the marriage relationship as well as the whims of their husbands in negotiating their rights vis-à-vis the Singapore state. Drawing on interviews and ethnographic work with 20 Vietnamese women who are commercially matched marriage migrants, the paper first focuses on the vulnerable positions these women find themselves, particularly given difficulties in forging their own support networks as well as weaknesses of the civil society sector in what has been called an 'illiberal democracy' characterized by a political culture of 'non-resistance'. The paper then goes on to examine the way they negotiate rights to residency/citizenship, work and children within webs of asymmetrical power relations within the family and the nation-state. We draw on our findings to show that citizenship is 'a terrain of struggle' within a multicultural nation-state shaped by social ideologies of gender, race and class and negotiated on an everyday basis within spheres of family intimacy. |
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AbstractList | Globalization and increased mobilities have multiplied cross-border transactions not only in the economic sphere but have also a major impact on human relationships of intimacy. This can be seen in the increased volume of differently mediated forms of international marriage, not just straddling 'east' and 'west', but within Asia and across different ethnicities and nationalities. International marriage raises a host of social issues for countries of origin and destination, including challenges relating to the citizenship status and rights of the marriage migrant. This paper examines the negotiation of citizenship rights in the case of commercially matched marriage migrants -- namely Vietnamese women who marry Singaporean men and migrate to Singapore as 'foreign brides'. While they are folded into the 'family' -- what is often thought of as the basic building block of the nation in Asian societies -- they are not necessarily accorded full incorporation into the 'nation' despite Singapore's claims to multiculturalism. This is particularly salient at a point when cross-nationality, cross-ethnicity marriages between Singapore citizens and non-citizens are on the increase, accounting for over a third of marriages registered in Singapore in recent years. Vietnamese women who marry Singaporeans are positioned within the nation-state's citizenship regime as dependents of Singaporean men, having to rely on the legitimacy of the marriage relationship as well as the whims of their husbands in negotiating their rights vis-a-vis the Singapore state. Drawing on interviews and ethnographic work with 20 Vietnamese women who are commercially matched marriage migrants, the paper first focuses on the vulnerable positions these women find themselves, particularly given difficulties in forging their own support networks as well as weaknesses of the civil society sector in what has been called an 'illiberal democracy' characterized by a political culture of 'non-resistance'. The paper then goes on to examine the way they negotiate rights to residency/citizenship, work and children within webs of asymmetrical power relations within the family and the nation-state. We draw on our findings to show that citizenship is 'a terrain of struggle' within a multicultural nation-state shaped by social ideologies of gender, race and class and negotiated on an everyday basis within spheres of family intimacy. Adapted from the source document. Globalization and increased mobilities have multiplied cross-border transactions not only in the economic sphere but have also a major impact on human relationships of intimacy. This can be seen in the increased volume of differently mediated forms of international marriage, not just straddling 'east' and 'west', but within Asia and across different ethnicities and nationalities. International marriage raises a host of social issues for countries of origin and destination, including challenges relating to the citizenship status and rights of the marriage migrant. This paper examines the negotiation of citizenship rights in the case of commercially matched marriage migrants - namely Vietnamese women who marry Singaporean men and migrate to Singapore as 'foreign brides'. While they are folded into the 'family' - what is often thought of as the basic building block of the nation in Asian societies - they are not necessarily accorded full incorporation into the 'nation' despite Singapore's claims to multiculturalism. This is particularly salient at a point when cross-nationality, cross-ethnicity marriages between Singapore citizens and non-citizens are on the increase, accounting for over a third of marriages registered in Singapore in recent years. Vietnamese women who marry Singaporeans are positioned within the nation-state's citizenship regime as dependents of Singaporean men, having to rely on the legitimacy of the marriage relationship as well as the whims of their husbands in negotiating their rights vis-à-vis the Singapore state. Drawing on interviews and ethnographic work with 20 Vietnamese women who are commercially matched marriage migrants, the paper first focuses on the vulnerable positions these women find themselves, particularly given difficulties in forging their own support networks as well as weaknesses of the civil society sector in what has been called an 'illiberal democracy' characterized by a political culture of 'non-resistance'. The paper then goes on to examine the way they negotiate rights to residency/citizenship, work and children within webs of asymmetrical power relations within the family and the nation-state. We draw on our findings to show that citizenship is 'a terrain of struggle' within a multicultural nation-state shaped by social ideologies of gender, race and class and negotiated on an everyday basis within spheres of family intimacy. Globalization and increased mobilities have multiplied cross-border transactions not only in the economic sphere but have also a major impact on human relationships of intimacy. This can be seen in the increased volume of differently mediated forms of international marriage, not just straddling 'east' and 'west', but within Asia and across different ethnicities and nationalities. International marriage raises a host of social issues for countries of origin and destination, including challenges relating to the citizenship status and rights of the marriage migrant. This paper examines the negotiation of citizenship rights in the case of commercially matched marriage migrants - namely Vietnamese women who marry Singaporean men and migrate to Singapore as 'foreign brides'. While they are folded into the 'family' - what is often thought of as the basic building block of the nation in Asian societies - they are not necessarily accorded full incorporation into the 'nation' despite Singapore's claims to multiculturalism. This is particularly salient at a point when cross-nationality, cross-ethnicity marriages between Singapore citizens and non-citizens are on the increase, accounting for over a third of marriages registered in Singapore in recent years. Vietnamese women who marry Singaporeans are positioned within the nation- state's citizenship regime as dependents of Singaporean men, having to rely on the legitimacy of the marriage relationship as well as the whims of their husbands in negotiating their rights vis-à-vis the Singapore state. Drawing on interviews and ethnographic work with 20 Vietnamese women who are commercially matched marriage migrants, the paper first focuses on the vulnerable positions these women find themselves, particularly given difficulties in forging their own support networks as well as weaknesses of the civil society sector in what has been called an 'illiberal democracy' characterized by a political culture of 'non- resistance'. The paper then goes on to examine the way they negotiate rights to residency/citizenship, work and children within webs of asymmetrical power relations within the family and the nation-state. We draw on our findings to show that citizenship is 'a terrain of struggle' within a multicultural nation-state shaped by social ideologies of gender, race and class and negotiated on an everyday basis within spheres of family intimacy. Reprinted by permission of Taylor and Francis Ltd |
Author | Leng, Chee Heng Yeoh, Brenda S.A. Dung, Vu Thi Kieu |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Brenda S.A. surname: Yeoh fullname: Yeoh, Brenda S.A. email: geoysa@nus.edu.sg organization: Department of Geography and Asia Research Institute , National University of Singapore – sequence: 2 givenname: Chee Heng surname: Leng fullname: Leng, Chee Heng organization: Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore – sequence: 3 givenname: Vu Thi Kieu surname: Dung fullname: Dung, Vu Thi Kieu organization: Independent scholar |
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Cites_doi | 10.1080/0969229032000048853 10.1080/13621020701794166 10.1080/014177897339687 10.1355/9789814519106-031 10.1355/9789812307392 10.1080/1369183042000339006 10.1080/00497870802165502 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2007.00091.x 10.5070/T711009697 10.1177/0306396803044003025 10.1177/011719680901800102 10.1080/13621020701794224 10.1016/S0277-5395(00)00111-4 10.1177/011719680601500304 10.1080/13621020701794083 10.1080/13621020701794190 10.1111/j.1467-9663.2006.00493.x |
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References | Wang Hong-Zen (CIT0037) 2008; 12 Singapore Department of Statistics (CIT0026) Yeoh Brenda S.A (CIT0041) 2005; 31 Chua Beng Huat (CIT0005) 2003; 44 Hsia Hsiao-Chuan (CIT0007) 2009; 18 Toyota Mika (CIT0034) 2008; 12 Hussain Zakir (CIT0009) 2010 Rattana (CIT0019) 2011 Benjamin Geoffrey (CIT0002) 1976 National Population Secretariat (CIT0016) 2010 Wong Kan Seng (CIT0040) 2010 AWARE (CIT0001) 2006 Toh Mavis (CIT0033) 2009 Soysal Yasemin N (CIT0028) 1994 Koh Aaron (CIT0010) 2003; 18 Wang Hong-Zen (CIT0036) 2007; 41 Siddique Sharon (CIT0023) 1989 Saw Swee Hock (CIT0021) 2007 Singapore Department of Statistics (CIT0025) Yeoh Brenda S.A. Shirlena Huang (CIT0044) 2010; 22 Singapore Department of Statistics (CIT0027) Werbner Pnina (CIT0038) 1999 Lackey John M (CIT0012) 2008 Hussain Zakir (CIT0008) 2009 Kor Kian Beng (CIT0011) 2010 Yeoh Brenda S.A (CIT0043) 2008; 37 Ngoo Irene (CIT0017) 2010 National Population Secretariat (CIT0015) 2009 Chua Beng Huat (CIT0004) 1995 Stasiulis Daiva K (CIT0029) 1997; 57 Shen Hsui-Hua (CIT0022) 2003 Sassen Saskia (CIT0020) 2003; 10 Constable Nicole (CIT0003) 2005 Singapore Department of Statistics (CIT0024) 2009 Wong Kan Seng (CIT0039) 2007 Yeoh Brenda S.A (CIT0042) 2006; 97 Levitt Peggy (CIT0014) 2004; 38 Suzuki Nobue (CIT0031) 2000; 23 Turner Bryan S (CIT0035) 2008; 12 Straughan (CIT0030) 2009 Tan Eugene (CIT0032) 2008; 12 Glick-Schiller (CIT0006) 2004; 1 Piper Nicola (CIT0018) 2006; 15 |
References_xml | – volume: 10 start-page: 1 issue: 1 year: 2003 ident: CIT0020 publication-title: Review of International Political Economy doi: 10.1080/0969229032000048853 contributor: fullname: Sassen Saskia – volume-title: Cross-border Marriages: Gender and Mobility in Transnational Asia year: 2005 ident: CIT0003 contributor: fullname: Constable Nicole – volume-title: Communitarian Ideology and Democracy in Singapore year: 1995 ident: CIT0004 contributor: fullname: Chua Beng Huat – volume: 12 start-page: 45 issue: 1 year: 2008 ident: CIT0035 publication-title: Citizenship Studies doi: 10.1080/13621020701794166 contributor: fullname: Turner Bryan S – volume: 57 start-page: 112 year: 1997 ident: CIT0029 publication-title: Feminist Review doi: 10.1080/014177897339687 contributor: fullname: Stasiulis Daiva K – volume-title: Population Trends 2009 year: 2009 ident: CIT0024 contributor: fullname: Singapore Department of Statistics – start-page: 115 volume-title: Singapore: Society in Transition year: 1976 ident: CIT0002 contributor: fullname: Benjamin Geoffrey – start-page: 563 volume-title: Management of Success: The Moulding of Modern Singapore year: 1989 ident: CIT0023 doi: 10.1355/9789814519106-031 contributor: fullname: Siddique Sharon – volume-title: “DPM'S Speech on Population at The Committee of Supply 2010.” year: 2010 ident: CIT0040 contributor: fullname: Wong Kan Seng – volume: 18 start-page: 230 issue: 3 year: 2003 ident: CIT0010 publication-title: Sojourn contributor: fullname: Koh Aaron – volume-title: The Population of Singapore year: 2007 ident: CIT0021 doi: 10.1355/9789812307392 contributor: fullname: Saw Swee Hock – volume: 31 start-page: 409 issue: 2 year: 2005 ident: CIT0041 publication-title: Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies doi: 10.1080/1369183042000339006 contributor: fullname: Yeoh Brenda S.A – volume-title: “Beyond ‘Happily Ever After’: Making a Match between Singapore Grooms and Foreign Brides.” year: 2006 ident: CIT0001 contributor: fullname: AWARE – volume: 37 start-page: 548 issue: 5 year: 2008 ident: CIT0043 publication-title: Women's Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal doi: 10.1080/00497870802165502 contributor: fullname: Yeoh Brenda S.A – start-page: 181 volume-title: Ultra-low Fertility in Pacific Asia year: 2009 ident: CIT0030 contributor: fullname: Straughan – year: 2009 ident: CIT0008 publication-title: The Straits Times contributor: fullname: Hussain Zakir – volume-title: Limits of Citizenship: Migrants and Postnational Membership in Europe year: 1994 ident: CIT0028 contributor: fullname: Soysal Yasemin N – volume: 41 start-page: 706 issue: 3 year: 2007 ident: CIT0036 publication-title: International Migration Review doi: 10.1111/j.1747-7379.2007.00091.x contributor: fullname: Wang Hong-Zen – volume-title: Population in Brief 2010 year: 2010 ident: CIT0016 contributor: fullname: National Population Secretariat – volume: 22 start-page: 69 issue: 1 year: 2010 ident: CIT0044 publication-title: Journal of Aging and Social Policy contributor: fullname: Yeoh Brenda S.A. 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SubjectTerms | Adulthood. Marriage Asia Citizenship Civil Rights Civil society Cultural Pluralism Ethnology Family Family. Family relations Females Human ecology, environment Human settlements Life cycle an individual status Marriage Marriage migration Migrants Migrations Morphological source materials Multiculturalism nation-state Negotiation Physical anthropology, ethnobiology Political culture Rights Singapore Social structure and social relations Vietnam Womens Rights Working Women |
Title | Commercially arranged marriage and the negotiation of citizenship rights among Vietnamese marriage migrants in multiracial Singapore |
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