Beyond the Port City: Development and Identity in 21st Century SingaporePearson Prentice Hall, 2004 - 176 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 31 筆
第 56 頁
... Malay PAP members , periodically exhort the Malay community to become more achievement - oriented , pronouncements that naturally receive extensive media coverage ( Rahim 1998 : 53 ) . At the same time such publicity may well confirm the ...
... Malay PAP members , periodically exhort the Malay community to become more achievement - oriented , pronouncements that naturally receive extensive media coverage ( Rahim 1998 : 53 ) . At the same time such publicity may well confirm the ...
第 95 頁
... Malay population ( see Tables 4.5 and 4.6 ) . Just 3.5 per cent of Malay - headed households had monthly incomes from work of S $ 8,000 or above , compared with Chinese ( 18.3 per cent ) , Indian ( 13.2 per cent ) , and ' others ' ( 30 ...
... Malay population ( see Tables 4.5 and 4.6 ) . Just 3.5 per cent of Malay - headed households had monthly incomes from work of S $ 8,000 or above , compared with Chinese ( 18.3 per cent ) , Indian ( 13.2 per cent ) , and ' others ' ( 30 ...
第 96 頁
... Malay economic disadvantage . Li ( 1989 : 102 ) makes the point that the economic position of the Malays as a group relative to the Chinese has deteriorated since independence in 1959. Malays lost their favoured position in the ...
... Malay economic disadvantage . Li ( 1989 : 102 ) makes the point that the economic position of the Malays as a group relative to the Chinese has deteriorated since independence in 1959. Malays lost their favoured position in the ...
內容
Chapter Two Raffles and the Colonial Port City | 13 |
Chapter Six Housing the Nation and Contesting | 81 |
Culture Heritage | 121 |
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activities advantage appears areas Asian associations attract become British building capital cent Central centre century Chapter China Chinese citizens city-state civic civil society colonial competition conservation continued countries cultural direct discussion diversity dominance East economic effort established ethnic groups Figure foreign further geographical global globalisation growth identity important increasing independence Indians industrialisation industries infrastructure Institute integration interests investment island land less Library living major Malacca Malay nature neighbourhood organisations particularly Penang planning political population port city position Press production public housing estates Raffles region relations relatively remain residential residents role ruling schools sector seen shaping Singapore Singapore's situation social Source Southeast Asia space spatial Straits subsequent success Table town trade University urban Western workers Zone