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
Main Authors: Yeoh, Brenda S.A., Leng, Chee Heng, Dung, Vu Thi Kieu
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Basingstoke Routledge 01-03-2013
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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.
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
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  givenname: Chee Heng
  surname: Leng
  fullname: Leng, Chee Heng
  organization: Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore
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  givenname: Vu Thi Kieu
  surname: Dung
  fullname: Dung, Vu Thi Kieu
  organization: Independent scholar
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Issue 2
Keywords Arranged marriage
marriage migration
Immigrant
Negociation
Citizenship
Nation-State
multiculturalism
Migrant
Rights
Civil Society
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Vietnamese
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  start-page: 1
  issue: 1
  year: 2008
  ident: CIT0034
  publication-title: Citizenship Studies
  doi: 10.1080/13621020701794083
  contributor:
    fullname: Toyota Mika
– year: 2008
  ident: CIT0012
  publication-title: The Straits Times
  contributor:
    fullname: Lackey John M
– volume-title: Statistics on Marriages and Divorces 2005
  ident: CIT0026
  contributor:
    fullname: Singapore Department of Statistics
– year: 2009
  ident: CIT0033
  publication-title: The Straits Times
  contributor:
    fullname: Toh Mavis
– year: 2010
  ident: CIT0009
  publication-title: The Straits Times
  contributor:
    fullname: Hussain Zakir
– volume: 12
  start-page: 73
  issue: 1
  year: 2008
  ident: CIT0032
  publication-title: Citizenship Studies
  doi: 10.1080/13621020701794190
  contributor:
    fullname: Tan Eugene
– volume: 97
  start-page: 26
  issue: 1
  year: 2006
  ident: CIT0042
  publication-title: Tijdschrift Voor Economische En Sociale Geografie
  doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9663.2006.00493.x
  contributor:
    fullname: Yeoh Brenda S.A
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Snippet Globalization and increased mobilities have multiplied cross-border transactions not only in the economic sphere but have also a major impact on human...
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StartPage 139
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
URI https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14631369.2012.759746
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Volume 14
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