Ethnic Chinese Political Participation in Malaysia: Historical Trajectories, Institutional Channels, and Contemporary Reconfigurations
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.54536/jpsir.v3i1.6599Keywords:
Civil Society, Coalition Politics, Ethnic Chinese Malaysians, Political Participation, Social MovementsAbstract
This article approaches ethnic Chinese political participation in Malaysia as a historically situated and adaptive process shaped by institutional arrangements, political economy, and changing political opportunity structures. Rather than treating ethnic Chinese participation as a fixed pattern defined solely by ethnic bloc voting or communal bargaining, the study conceptualizes it as a set of evolving strategies that unfold across different periods and political arenas. Drawing on historical analysis and existing scholarship, it traces the trajectory of Chinese political engagement from elite coalition brokerage in the early post-independence years, through the constraints imposed during the New Economic Policy era after 1969, to the growing prominence of oppositional politics, civil society activism, and civic-reform mobilization following Reformasi and the electoral shifts of 2008. The article identifies three overlapping logics of participation—coalition brokerage, competitive opposition through multiethnic alliances, and rights-based civic engagement—and examines how they interact in contemporary Malaysia. It argues that ethnic Chinese political participation has become increasingly hybrid, issue-driven, and grounded in notions of citizenship, reflecting the broader tensions and possibilities that characterize Malaysia’s ongoing contestations over democracy, governance, and minority inclusion.
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