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Class inequality in the global city : migrants, workers and cosmopolitanism in Singapore

Part of the Global diversities series
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In striving to become cosmopolitan, global cities aim to attract highly-skilled workers while relying on a vast underbelly of low-waged, low status migrants.

This book tells the story of one such city, revealing how national development produces both aspirations to be cosmopolitan and to improve one's class standing, along with limitations in achieving such aims.

Through the analysis of three different groups of workers in Singapore, Ye shows that cosmopolitanism is an exclusive and aspirational construct created through global and national development strategies, transnational migration and individual senses of identity.

This dialectic relationship between class and cosmopolitanism is never free from power and is constituted through material and symbolic conditions, struggles and violence.

Class is also constituted through 'the self' and lies at the very heart of different constructions of personhood as they intersect with gender, race, sexuality, ethnicity and nationality.

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Product Details
Palgrave Macmillan
1349683426 / 9781349683420
Paperback / softback
11/02/2020
United Kingdom
English
193 pages
22 cm
Reprint. Originally published: 2016.