ABSTRACT

To celebrate Singapore’s fiftieth anniversary for its independence from Malaysia in 2015, 35 students, academics and activists came together to discuss and write about pioneering Singaporean human rights activists and their under-reported stories in Singapore. The city-state is known for its remarkable economic success while having strict laws on individual freedom in the name of national security, public order and racial harmony. Singapore’s tough stance on human rights, however, does not negate the long and persistent existence of a human rights society that is little known to the world until today. This volume, composed of nine distinctive chapters, records a history of human rights activists, their campaigns, main contentions with the government, survival strategies and other untold stories in Singapore’s first 50 years of state-building.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|16 pages

Singapore’s press for freedom

Between media regulation and activism

chapter 6|18 pages

Shifting boundaries

State–society relations and activism on migrant worker rights in Singapore

chapter 8|19 pages

LGBTQ activism in Singapore 1

chapter 9|18 pages

Navigating through the ‘rules’ of civil society

In search of disability rights in Singapore