Kenneth Paul Tan (editor) (2022) Singapore's First Year of COVID-19: Public Health, Immigration, the Neoliberal State, and Authoritarian Populism (Palgrave Macmillan)
This book addresses the question of what Singapore's COVID-19 pandemic response in the first year can tell us about the strengths and weaknesses of the Singapore model and what its prospects might be in an increasingly volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous post-pandemic world. As a concise, holistic, and critical documentation of the first year of COVID-19 in Singapore, the multi-disciplinary chapters in this book provide a broad-ranging analysis of an internationally admired model of governance severely tested by a global pandemic crisis whose end is still not in sight. The book focuses specifically on the interconnections among Singapore’s political economy, public health policies, immigration policies, and the elite and pragmatic system of state authoritarianism that, especially since the 1980s, has been at the heart of managing the tensions and contradictions of a nation-state that is also a global city, an important node in a network of goods, services, investments, wealth, people, ideas, and images, all moving rapidly. The chapters critically employ topics and concepts such as neoliberal globalization, authoritarian populism, moral panic, social stigmatization, heterotopia, spatial segregation, and others to make sense of a thoroughly complex situation.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Neoliberal Globalization, Authoritarian Populism, and Moral Panics
Kenneth Paul Tan
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Neoliberal Singapore: Nation-State and Global City
Andrea Dugo
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Public Health Legacies: Tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, and SARS in Singapore
Hongwu Lyu, Aymeric Vo Quang
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Tackling Covid-19, the Singapore Way
Johanna Dirlewanger-Lücke, Junhao Li
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The Contradictions and Challenges of Singapore’s Immigration Policy
Davide Brugola, Michael Flood
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Migrant Worker Dormitories: Virus in a Neoliberal Politics of Space
Carolin Bernhard, Mara Ellemunt
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Ready for the Post-Pandemic World?
Kenneth Paul Tan