The 1957 decision to establish local citizenship in Singapore was made after more than a year of negotiations between David Marshall and Lim Yew Hock’s Labour Front and the British government. These negotiations, which led to the Singapore Citizenship Ordinance in 1957, focused on the procedures for oaths of allegiance, eligibility for naturalisation and registration, effects on the franchise, dual citizenship and its critics, Chinese consular plans and the relationship with the British Nationality Act (BNA) of 1948. The two parties to these negotiations also held differing views on the extent and coverage of local Singaporean citizenship. In the United Kingdom, the Home Office, objected to the formation of local citizenship outside of the framework provided by the BNA. Ultimately however, British officials were willing to defer to the preferences that the Singaporean government had in relation to establishing local citizenship, even if specific clauses in the 1957 ordinance represented compromises between the two negotiating parties. Arguably citizenship represented moves towards decolonisation, instantiating wider debates about the transfer of political powers, competencies, sovereignty and, in a broader sense, the making of new nations and their identities in a post-colonial South East Asia.
Details
Start:
3 April 2025
4:30 pm
End: 3 April 2025
6:00 pm
NTU History
SHHK Seminar Room 6 (Level 1)
639818
Singapore