Global flows of foreign talent: Identity anxieties in Singapore's ethnoscape


Autoria(s): Koh, Aaron
Data(s)

01/10/2003

Resumo

This paper draws on Appadurai's (1996) concept of ethnoscapes — the global flow of people or what has become increasingly popularized as the global flow of talent. Singapore has initiated a foreign talent policy to compete for a global pool of talent to make up for its shortfall of indigenous work-force. The rationale for recruiting foreign talent is informed by a nationalist competitive ideology to sustain Singapore in the new knowledge-based economy. This paper examines the competing and dissenting discourses surrounding the foreign talent policy. It argues that the mobility of migratory flow has transformative and disruptive effects at the level of culture and the identity landscape of Singapore, where its discursive cultural boundaries are drawn according to a nationalist framework. Drawing on theories and concepts of ‘diaspora’, ‘hybridity’, and ‘third space’, these are the political and cultural issues that this paper attempts to tease out. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:95253

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

The Institute of Southeast Asian Studies

Palavras-Chave #Emigration #immigration #Brain drain #Government policy #intellectual capital #Cultural boundaries #Population geography #Frontier workers #Intellectuals #EX #420300 Cultural Studies #750308 National identity
Tipo

Journal Article