Title
Year
Author
The Singapore Council of Women and the women's movement
The Singapore Council of Women and the women's movement
Collection | Women & Gender Studies |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Chew, Phyllis G. L. |
Title |
The Singapore Council of Women and the women's movement |
Source Title | Journal of Southeast Asian Studies |
Publication Date | 1994 |
DOI |
http://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0022463400006706 |
Call Number | DS501 JSAS |
Subject |
Singapore Council of Women Women -- Singapore -- Societies and clubs -- History Women -- Singapore -- Social conditions Women's rights -- Singapore |
Page | 112-140 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 25 |
Issue | 1 |
The Singapore press and the women's movement: a study of alternative voices
The Singapore press and the women's movement: a study of alternative voices
1995
Chan, Jennifer Yin-Teng
Collection | Women & Gender Studies |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Chan, Jennifer Yin-Teng |
Title |
The Singapore press and the women's movement: a study of alternative voices |
Publication Date | 1995 |
Call Number | P90 1995 2 |
Subject |
Press -- Singapore Feminism -- Singapore Women's rights -- Singapore |
Page | 63 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Dissertation/Thesis |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Description |
Academic exercise -- Dept. of Mass Communication Programme, National University of Singapore |
The Singapore woman
The Singapore woman
Collection | Women & Gender Studies |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
AWARE (Singapore) |
Title |
The Singapore woman |
Publication Date | 1988 |
Publisher | Singapore : AWARE |
Call Number | HQ1784.2 Siw |
Subject |
Women -- Singapore -- Social conditions Women's rights -- Singapore |
Page | 46 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
The spaces of coping: women and “poverty” in Singapore
The spaces of coping: women and “poverty” in Singapore
Collection | Women & Gender Studies |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Davidson, Gillian |
Title |
The spaces of coping: women and “poverty” in Singapore |
Source Title | Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography |
Publication Date | 1996 |
DOI |
http://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9493.1996.tb00088.x |
Call Number | G38 SJTG |
Subject |
Women -- Singapore Poverty -- Singapore Sex role -- Singapore Work and family -- Singapore Married women -- Employment -- Singapore Family services -- Singapore Family policy -- Singapore Social perception -- Singapore |
Page | 113-131 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 17 |
Issue | 2 |
The status of women in a transitional society : male-female differentials in education, occupation, and earnings in Singapore
The status of women in a transitional society : male-female differentials in education, occupation, and earnings in Singapore
1997
Porter Tan, Debbie Eng Bee.
Collection | Women & Gender Studies |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Porter Tan, Debbie Eng Bee. |
Title |
The status of women in a transitional society : male-female differentials in education, occupation, and earnings in Singapore |
Publication Date | 1997 |
DOI | |
Call Number | HM15*UNB 1997 1 |
Subject |
Women -- Education -- Singapore Women -- Singapore -- Economic conditions |
Page | 276 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Dissertation/Thesis |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Description |
Thesis (Ph.D) -- University of New Brunswick |
The Women's Charter
The Women's Charter
Collection | Women & Gender Studies |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Chelvam, Charmian |
Title |
The Women's Charter |
Publication Date | 1973 |
Call Number | D6 *1973 13 |
Subject |
Woman -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- Singapore Women's rights -- Singapore |
Page | 51 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Dissertation/Thesis |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Description |
Academic exercise -- Dept. of History, University of Singapore |
Ties that bind: state policy and migrant female domestic helpers in Singapore
Ties that bind: state policy and migrant female domestic helpers in Singapore
1996
Huang, Shirlena
Yeoh, Brenda S. A.
Collection | Women & Gender Studies |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Huang, Shirlena Yeoh, Brenda S. A. |
Title |
Ties that bind: state policy and migrant female domestic helpers in Singapore |
Source Title | Geoforum |
Publication Date | 1996 |
DOI |
http://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0016-7185(96)00023-1 |
Call Number | G1 GF |
Subject |
Women household employees -- Singapore Women foreign workers -- Singapore Women -- Employment -- Singapore Labor supply -- Singapore Working mothers -- Singapore Work and family -- Singapore |
Page | 479-493 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 27 |
Issue | 4 |
Tiptoe out of the closet: the before and after of the increasingly visible gay community in Singapore
Tiptoe out of the closet: the before and after of the increasingly visible gay community in Singapore
2001
Khng, R. H.
Collection | Women & Gender Studies |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Khng, R. H. |
Title |
Tiptoe out of the closet: the before and after of the increasingly visible gay community in Singapore |
Source Title | Journal of Homosexuality |
Publication Date | 2001 |
DOI |
http://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/J082v40n03_05 |
Call Number | HQ75 JH |
Subject |
Gay communities -- Singapore Gays -- Singapore -- Identity Coming out (Sexual orientation) -- Singapore Closeted gays -- Singapore |
Page | 81-97 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 40 |
Issue | 3-4 |
To be or not to be: chinese-Singaporean women deliberating on voluntary childlessness
To be or not to be: chinese-Singaporean women deliberating on voluntary childlessness
2013
Ee, Amanda Hui Li
Plüss, Caroline
Chan, Kwok Bun
Collection | Women & Gender Studies |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Ee, Amanda Hui Li Plüss, Caroline Chan, Kwok Bun |
Editor |
Chan, Kwok Bun |
Title |
To be or not to be: chinese-Singaporean women deliberating on voluntary childlessness |
Source Title | International Handbook of Chinese Families |
Publication Date | 2013 |
Publisher | New York, NY: Springer |
DOI |
https://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-0266-4_13 |
Call Number | HQ684 Int 2013 |
Subject |
Chinese -- Singapore Women -- Singapore Childfree choice -- Singapore Childlessness -- Singapore |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book Chapter |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
restrictedAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Abstract |
This chapter reports on our study of the self-justifications and internal conversations, or self-dialogues, of 16 married Chinese-Singaporean women about their deliberations on voluntary childlessness. The sample of our study consisted of higher-skilled (H) and lower-skilled (L) women. We used the social exchange framework of Levinger (A social exchange view on the dissolution of pair relationships. In: F. I. Nye (ed) Family relationships. Beverly Hills: Sage, 1982) and Chan (J Fam Econ Issues 31(3), 387–95, 2009; The Straits Times, 13 June 2010; J Asian Bus 2011) to explain these women’s justifications of their choices. More precisely, we examined how the women explained their decisions as a result of their cost–benefit analyses in the context of their perceptions of four crucial social agents: husbands, workplace, extended families, and Singapore society. Our findings show that the women’s reflections were varied and diverse. Differences stemmed from their education levels and from the multiple intersections of the women’s perceptions of their relations with their social agents. Our data yield that the women’s decisions were most strongly motivated by their attempts to arbitrate financial costs, their wishes to pursue a career, and their assessment that their husbands would not contribute much to childrearing. Purely financial considerations were more strongly expressed by the lower-skilled women, yet both groups of higher-skilled and lower-skilled women lamented that extended families and Singapore society would not provide sufficient help to alleviate their burden in child care. |
To Singapore with love
To Singapore with love
Collection | Women & Gender Studies |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Rajan, Uma |
Editor |
Pillai, Gopinath Kesavapany, K. |
Title |
To Singapore with love |
Source Title | 50 years of Indian community in Singapore |
Publication Date | 2016 |
Publisher | Singapore: World Scientific |
DOI |
http://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789813140592_0013 |
Call Number | DS610.25.E37 Fif 2016 |
Subject |
Women, East Indian -- Singapore |
Keyword |
women in workplace |
Page | 105-112 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book Chapter |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
restrictedAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Abstract |
Indian women in Singapore have left their footprints firmly in Singapore’s sands of time and history with their dedicated contribution to various forms of human activity and industry. Some of them are not with us today, but their contributions continue to benefit us. Others who are still with us continue to make significant contributions nationally and internationally in their respective fields of interest. We have political leaders, social activists, civil servants, social workers, community leaders, administrators, artists, doctors, lawyers, business entrepreneurs, journalists, athletes and many others who have proved that, despite all the odds being stacked against them, they can equal anyone else in every way. They have made a difference, enjoyed the support of their families and many have raised daughters and sons who have and still are contributing to Singapore’s economy and society |
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