Type | Journal Article - Marriage Trends in Insular Southeast Asia: Their Economic and Socio-Cultural Dimension |
Title | International marriages in Malaysia: issues arising from state policies and processes |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2011 |
URL | https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Heng_Leng_Chee/publication/262263531_International_marriages_in_Malaysia_Issues_arising_from_state_policies_and_processes/links/004635372ebd3e98eb000000.pdf |
Abstract | In this chapter, I examine the assumptions underlying governmental policies and procedures in relation to international marriage in Malaysia. When marriage is contracted between two individuals of different nationalities, it usually involves one party migrating to the country of the other, whether before or after marriage. This often brings out the underlying tensions between the state and its citizens, and within the state itself. The state as gatekeeper of the nation seeks to control migratory flows and entry into citizenship according to its own criteria and logic, often conflicting with the intentions and motivations of individuals who marry and migrate. This creates tension between the state’s role as protector of the institution of family and as gatekeeper to citizenship entitlement. As marriage is one of the ways by which one may gain national citizenship status, the nexus between migration and marriage has become a particularly contentious site. |
» | Malaysia - Population and Housing Census 2000 |