ABSTRACT

Commentators on the media in Southeast Asia either emphasise with optimism the prospect for new media to provide possibilities for greater democratic discourse, or else, less optimistically, focus on the continuing ability of governments to exercise tight and sophisticated control of the media. This book explores these issues with reference to Malaysia and Singapore. It analyses how journalists monitor governments and cover elections, discussing what difference journalism makes; it examines citizen journalism, and the constraints on it, often self-imposed constraints; and it assesses how governments control the media, including outlining the development and current application of legal restrictions.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

Making spaces for speech

chapter |23 pages

Malaysiakini's citizen journalists

Navigating local and national identities online

chapter |22 pages

Seeking democracy in Malaysia

New media, traditional media and the state

chapter |24 pages

Defaming politicians, scandalizing the courts

A look at recent developments in Singapore

chapter |20 pages

Where is pedagogy in teaching and teacher education?

Online citizen journalism in Malaysia and Singapore