Title
Year
Author
Ecological distribution of social pathology in Singapore
Ecological distribution of social pathology in Singapore
Collection | Social Problems |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Chen, Peter S. J. |
Title |
Ecological distribution of social pathology in Singapore |
Publication Date | 1977 |
Publisher | Singapore : Chopmen |
Call Number | HN770.2 Che |
Subject |
Social problems Singapore -- Social conditions |
Page | 27 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Fighting youth crime: a comparative study of two little dragons in Asia
Fighting youth crime: a comparative study of two little dragons in Asia
2004
Choi, Alfred
Lo, T. Wing
Collection | Social Problems |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Choi, Alfred Lo, T. Wing |
Title |
Fighting youth crime: a comparative study of two little dragons in Asia |
Publication Date | 2004 |
Publisher | Singapore : Eastern Universities Press |
Call Number | HV9215.12 Cho 2004 |
Subject |
Juvenile delinquency -- Singapore Juvenile delinquency -- China -- Hong Kong Youth -- Singapore Youth -- China -- Hong Kong Crime -- Singapore Crime -- China -- Hong Kong |
Page | 246 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Version of work | 2nd ed |
Description |
A comparative study of juvenile delinquency and youth crime in Singapore and Hong Kong |
Fighting youth crime: success and failure of two little dragons
Fighting youth crime: success and failure of two little dragons
Collection | Social Problems |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Choi, Alfred Lo, T. Wing |
Title |
Fighting youth crime: success and failure of two little dragons |
Publication Date | 2002 |
Publisher | Singapore : Times Academic Press |
Call Number | HV9215.12 Cho |
Subject |
Juvenile delinquency -- Singapore Juvenile delinquency -- China -- Hong Kong Youth -- Singapore Youth -- China -- Hong Kong Crime -- Singapore Crime -- China -- Hong Kong |
Page | 247 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Description |
A comparative study of delinquency and measures to counter it in Hong Kong and Singapore |
Guilty as charged : 25 crimes that have shaken Singapore since 1965
Guilty as charged : 25 crimes that have shaken Singapore since 1965
Collection | Social Problems |
---|---|
Editor |
Abdul Hafiz Abdul Samad |
Title |
Guilty as charged : 25 crimes that have shaken Singapore since 1965 |
Publication Date | 2017 |
Publisher | Singapore: Straits Times Press |
Call Number | HV7100.67 Gui 2017 |
Subject |
Crime -- Singapore True crime stories -- Singapore Murder -- Singapore |
Page | 348 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Description |
This book recounts 25 infamous crime cases that have taken place in Singapore since 1965. Some of the victims’ names are still remembered today. Jenny Cheok, 22, killed by her apparently devoted boyfriend Sunny Ang during a diving trip near the Sisters’ Islands. Nine-year-old Agnes Ng and 10-year-old Ghazali Marzuki, killed by self-styled medium Adrian Lim, his wife and his mistress. Huang Na, nine, murdered at the Pasir Panjang Wholesale centre by vegetable packer Took Leng How. |
Hierarchies of mixedness: hybridity, mixed-race racisms and belonging for Eurasians in Singapore
Hierarchies of mixedness: hybridity, mixed-race racisms and belonging for Eurasians in Singapore
2022
Rocha, Zarine L.
Yeoh, Brenda S. A.
Collection | Social Problems |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Rocha, Zarine L. Yeoh, Brenda S. A. |
Title |
Hierarchies of mixedness: hybridity, mixed-race racisms and belonging for Eurasians in Singapore |
Source Title | Ethnic and Racial Studies |
Publication Date | 2022 |
DOI |
https://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2021.1921235 |
Subject |
Eurasians -- Singapore -- Social conditions Racism -- Singapore Singapore -- Race relations |
Page | 738-756 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
restrictedAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 45 |
Issue | 4 |
Abstract |
As a mixed yet bounded racial category, Eurasian identity in Singapore presents a key case in exploring mixed-race racisms and hierarchies based around class, race and migration. Racial categorizations in postcolonial Singapore draw heavily on colonial racial hierarchies, and the shifting boundaries around Eurasianness illustrate the performative nature of mixed identities, and the politics of being recognized/misrecognized as mixed, not-mixed, or “other” within the racialized state framework. Drawing on 30 life-story interviews with individuals who self-identify as Eurasian, this paper examines racialized identities based around mixedness and explores the valuations placed on different heritages and types of mixing in order to draw out experiences of mixed- and intra-race racialization and racisms for the Eurasian community. The limits to the performance of (mixed) race are key, seen in the juxtapositions between race, mixed race and phenotype, as inflected by performed heritage, socio-economic status and state-sanctioned cultural markers. © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. |
Las Vegas in Singapore: violence, progress and the crisis of nationalist modernity
Las Vegas in Singapore: violence, progress and the crisis of nationalist modernity
2019
Lee, Kah-Wee
Collection | Social Problems |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Lee, Kah-Wee |
Title |
Las Vegas in Singapore: violence, progress and the crisis of nationalist modernity |
Publication Date | 2019 |
Publisher | Singapore: NUS Press |
Call Number | HV6722.S55 Lee 2019 |
Subject |
Gambling -- Singapore -- History Gambling -- Moral and ethical aspects -- Singapore Gambling -- Law and legislation -- Singapore Gambling industry -- Economic aspects -- Singapore Casinos -- Economic aspects -- Singapore |
Page | xvii, 275 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Description |
Las Vegas in Singapore looks at the collision of the histories of Singapore and Las Vegas in the form of Marina Bay Sands, one of Singapore’s two Integrated Resorts.
The first history begins in colonial Singapore in the 1880s, when British administrators revised gambling laws in response to the political threat posed by Chinese-run gambling syndicates. Following the tracks of these punitive laws and practices, the book moves into the 1960s when the newly independent city-state created a national lottery while criminalizing both organized and petty gambling in the name of nation-building. The 22d history shifts the focus to corporate Las Vegas in the 1950s when digital technology and corporate management practices found each other on the casino floor. Tracing the emergence of the specialist casino designer, the book reveals how casino development evolved into a highly rationalized spatial template designed to maximize profits. Today an iconic landmark of Singapore, Marina Bay Sands is also an artifact of these two histories, an attempt by Singapore to normalize what was once criminalized in its nationalist history.
Lee Kah-Wee argues that the historical project of the control of vice is also about the control of space and capital. The result is an uneven landscape where the legal and moral status of gambling is contingent on where it is located. As the current wave of casino expansion spreads across Asia, he warns that these developments should not be seen as liberalization but instead as a continuation of the project of concentrating power by modern states and corporations. |
Leading journeys: inspirations for Asia and beyond
Leading journeys: inspirations for Asia and beyond
Collection | Social Problems |
---|---|
Title |
Leading journeys: inspirations for Asia and beyond |
Publication Date | 2017 |
Publisher | Singapore: Temasek Foundation International |
Call Number | HD2769.2 Sin.Le 2017 |
Subject |
Temasek Foundation International Charity organizations -- Singapore Nonprofit organizations -- Singapore Human services -- Singapore |
Page | 88 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Lighting lives: the PPIS story / editor,
Lighting lives: the PPIS story / editor,
Collection | Social Problems |
---|---|
Editor |
Mohd. Ali Mahmood |
Title |
Lighting lives: the PPIS story / editor, |
Publication Date | 2008 |
Publisher | Singapore : Persatuan Pemudi Islam Singapura |
Call Number | HQ1170 Lig 2008 |
Subject |
Persatuan Pemudi Islam Singapura Muslim women -- Singapore -- Societies, etc Social work with women -- Singapore Muslim youth -- Singapore -- Societies, etc Islam -- Singapore -- Societies, etc |
Page | 115 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Minority gangs in Singapore prisons: prisonisation revisited
Minority gangs in Singapore prisons: prisonisation revisited
2019
Ganapathy, Narayanan
Balachandran, Lavanya
Collection | Social Problems |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Ganapathy, Narayanan Balachandran, Lavanya |
Title |
Minority gangs in Singapore prisons: prisonisation revisited |
Source Title | Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology |
Publication Date | 2019 |
DOI |
http://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0004865819876674 |
Subject |
Prisons -- Singapore -- Sociological aspects Imprisonment -- Social aspects -- Singapore Prison gangs -- Singapore Gangs -- Singapore Prisoners -- Singapore -- Social life and customs |
Page | 44-64 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 53 |
Issue | 1 |
Description |
This article attempts to better contextualise the theoretical and empirical connections between pre-prison orientation of prisoners and their subsequent adaption and subjective experiences of imprisonment using the case study of Omega, a racial minority gang in the Singapore prisons. While the article traces the gang’s emergence to its marginality in both the mainstream and illegitimate societies, the persistence of Omega beyond prisons is also shown to lie in its capacity to be remodelled for the street where the gang operates on an equal footing with the historically entrenched Chinese Secret Societies in the illicit economy. |
Moralising racial regimes: surveillance and control after Singapore’s ‘Little India riots’
Moralising racial regimes: surveillance and control after Singapore’s ‘Little India riots’
2022
Greener, Joe
Collection | Social Problems |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Greener, Joe |
Title |
Moralising racial regimes: surveillance and control after Singapore’s ‘Little India riots’ |
Source Title | Race and Class |
Publication Date | 2022 |
DOI |
https://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1177/03063968221095733 |
Subject |
Race riots -- Singapore --Prevention Social control -- Singapore Foreign workers, South Asian -- Singapore Racism -- Singapore |
Page | 46-62 |
Language | English |
URI | |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
restrictedAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 64 |
Issue | 1 |
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