Race-based affirmative action in Malaysia:misrecognised subjectivities, enduring inequalities
Malaysia's race-based affirmative action is often studied within the objective domain of resource deficit and distribution. In this paper, I focus on the subjective domain to interrogate how the racial identity modes of Bumiputera Malay youths shape their social attitudes towards affirmative action in Malaysia. Drawing on in-depth interviews, I posit three racial identity modes that correspond to three social attitudes towards affirmative action. The findings point to the disjuncture between Malay subjectivities and their colonial construction; the contestations over affirmative action that go beyond redistribution to recognition; and the neglect of intersectionality in conceptualising Bumiputera disadvantages. I argue that affirmative action can be better understood by incorporating non-elite perspectives, featuring different sites, scales and actors in the reproduction of subjectivities; the politics of affirmative action has to be reconstituted as struggles for recognition and redistribution; and the intersectional disadvantages of Bumiputeras must be foregrounded in the reclaiming of this policy agenda in Malaysia.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Keywords | affirmative action,coloniality,intersectionality,Malaysia,racial identity,Coloniality,Affirmative action,Intersectionality,Racial identity |
| Departments | Sociology |
| DOI | 10.1016/j.ajss.2021.12.001 |
| Date Deposited | 01 Jun 2022 11:45 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/115266 |
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