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Open AccessDissertationDOI

Engaging divided society in the nation-building process : the case of government communication in Malaysia

TLDR
Thematic analysis on all eleven national action plan (NAP) documents known as Malaysia Plan (1965-2016) was conducted to enable the pattern of similarities and differences in nation-building and government communication strategies to be identified over time as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
This thesis explores how government engages with a divided society in the context of nation-building. The widely used yet loosely understood concept of ‘engagement’ in the context of government communication is the focus of this thesis. By using Malaysia as the case study, this research investigates how citizens are communicatively constructed in the context of Malaysia’s post-independence nation-building process. This study is significant because research on citizen engagement in Malaysia’s nation-building is limited and studies focusing on the concept of engagement in deeply divided societies are also scarce.Thematic analysis on all eleven national action plan (NAP) documents known as Malaysia Plan (1965-2016) was conducted to enable the pattern of similarities and differences in nation-building and government communication strategies to be identified over time. Semi-structured elite interviews with the elite actors in Malaysia’s federal government were conducted to understand the government’s articulation and operationalisation of engagement in the context of nation-building process.The key findings from the NAPs reveal that the nation-building in Malaysia takes in a form of national identity project. Adopting an elite instrumentalist approach, national unity becomes the focal communicative strategy in the construction of the national identity. The elite interviews on the other hand demonstrate that government actors tend to describe engagement using the notion of dialogic communication. While acknowledging the advancement in communication technologies, government actors emphasise that the face-to-face engagement initiatives with the citizens are of central importance in the nation-building process.This thesis contributes to the studies of government strategic communication in the context of a deeply divided society that has been characterised as "plural society" that is in a state of “stable tension” (Shamsul, 2009). It helps to develop a richer understanding and knowledge of Malaysia’s nation-building process and approach as a modern postcolonial nation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Engagement in public relations discipline: Themes, theoretical perspectives and methodological approaches

TL;DR: The authors conducted a content analysis of 59 journal articles on public engagement published in the last decade in Journal of Communication Management, Journal of Public Relations Research, Public Relations Inquiry and Public Relations Review.
Book ChapterDOI

Malaysia’s New Economic Policy and ‘National Unity

TL;DR: In Malaysia, the New Economic Policy (NEP) was introduced in 1970 as part of a package of measures introduced after the political crisis of May 1969, which sought to "eradicate poverty" and "restructure society to eliminate the identification of race with economic function".
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National identity in Northern Ireland: stability or change?

TL;DR: In this paper, a set of fundamental, long-term factors associated with the Northern Ireland conflict are addressed, including the pattern of underlying values and attitudes, especially those related to identity, that have helped to shape the nature of intercommunal competition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Education and national integration in Malaysia: Stocktaking thirty years after independence

TL;DR: In this paper, a national curriculum was implemented characterised by a common curriculum, a common language of instruction (Malay), and common public examinations, which resulted not only in intensifying inter-ethnic tensions but also in highlighting intra-ethnic inequities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Government communication in the digital age: Social media’s effect on local government public relations:

TL;DR: In this paper, the use and perceptions of social media as a communication tool were explored using interviews with public information officers (PIOs) in local governments. But they focused on the use of Twitter and Facebook as communication tools.
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