購物車 0
THE BERSIH MOVEMENT AND DEMOCRATISATION IN MALAYSIA

THE BERSIH MOVEMENT AND DEMOCRATISATION IN MALAYSIA: REPRESSION, DISSENT AND OPPORTUNITIES/ by Khoo Ying Hooi

RM 45.00
  • author: Khoo Ying Hooi
  • publisher: SIRD & ISEAS
  • published in: 2020
  • language: English


“[This work] gives a long overdue recognition to the power of collective action by the Malaysian people’s movement that was catalysed by BERSIH 2.0... touching on critical issues, such as corruption, electoral frauds and abuse of powers, and linked the peoples’ power to a peaceful and democratic electoral change in government.”

Maria Chin Abdullah

Member of Parliament Petaling Jaya


Beginning in 2005 as a small electoral reform committee, the Coalition for Clean and Fair Elections – or Bersih – soon became Malaysia’s most prominent social movement, mobilising five mass demonstrations on the streets of Kuala Lumpur and other cities at home and abroad, becoming a prominent voice not only for electoral reform, but also against corruption and authoritarianism. 

Based on participant observation approach and first-hand interviews with key actors, this is the first academic book that looks into how Bersih operated within an authoritarian system that turned into a movement which took the collective grievances of Malaysians and enabled Malaysian socio-political activism to force the government to concede to elements of electoral reform. Engaging with social movement theory, the author locates Bersih at the centre of the movement for democracy in Malaysia, thus creating a platform for citizen participation and mobilisation that helped form the basis of a new democratic ethos. 

Along the way, she notes the way in which Bersih evolved out of earlier civil society activism and the Reformasi movement to place political protest and popular mobilisation as important forces in Malaysian politics. This book makes a major contribution to the scholarly work on social movement theories in the Southeast Asian context, and to the growing literature on social movements and democratisation. 


About the author:

Khoo Ying Hooi, PhD, is the Head and Senior Lecturer at the Department of International and Strategic Studies, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Malaya.