CASE STUDY Transiting into the Singapore-an identity: Immigration  and naturalisation policy Cover Image

CASE STUDY Transiting into the Singapore-an identity: Immigration and naturalisation policy
CASE STUDY Transiting into the Singapore-an identity: Immigration and naturalisation policy

Author(s): Mathews Mathew, Debbie Soon
Subject(s): Migration Studies, Ethnic Minorities Studies
Published by: Transnational Press London
Keywords: Naturalisation; immigration; integration; Singapore;

Summary/Abstract: Debates in Singapore about immigration and naturalisation policy have escalated substantially since 2008 when the government allowed an unprecedentedly large number of immigrants into the country. This essay will discuss immigration and naturalisation policy in Singapore and the tensions that have been evoked, and how these policies are a key tool in regulating the optimal composition and size of the population for the state’s imperatives. It will demonstrate that although the state has, as part of its broader economic and manpower planning policy to import labour for economic objectives, it seeks to retain only skilled labour with an exclusive form of citizenship. Even as the Singapore state has made its form of citizenship even more exclusive by reducing the benefits that non-citizens receive, its programmes for naturalising those who make the cut to become citizens which include the recently created Singapore Citizenship Journey (SCJ) is by no means burdensome from a comparative perspective. This paper examines policy discourse, key symbols and narratives provided at naturalisation events and demonstrates how these are used to evoke the sense of the ideal citizen among new Singaporeans.

  • Issue Year: 13/2016
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 33-48
  • Page Count: 16
  • Language: English