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Political Coalitions of Labour Control: Comparing Singapore and Cambodia
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Political Coalitions of Labour Control: Comparing Singapore and Cambodia

Garry Rodan and Sreang Chheat
Journal of contemporary Asia
2025

Abstract

Authoritarianism democratisation, labour co-option labour control political institutions political participation
Labour control through coercion, violence, and restrictive laws is well analysed for Southeast Asia. Less understood is why, how, and to what effect, political participatory institutions articulate with labour control strategies. Central to such an understanding is analysis of political coalitions shaping these institutions, and the historical and dynamic political economy foundations of these coalitions. In this article it is argued that an ideologically cohesive coalition of technocratic politico-bureaucrats seized power in Singapore during the Cold War, and established state capitalism through which both labour and private capital can be politically disciplined. These power relations are integral to the capacity for state-sponsored participation rationalised through ideologies of consultative authoritarianism. By contrast, in post-Cold War Cambodia, a coalition encompassing private conglomerates, domestic political actors, international investors, and organisations initially supported labour participation but without ideological consensus over why or how. Intra-coalitional tensions emerged when trade unions aligned with political opposition to challenge crony capitalism’s patronage networks and ideologies linking the ruling party and domestic business, leading to greater reliance on state coercion to control labour.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.3 Management
6.3.744 Trade Unions
Web Of Science research areas
Area Studies
ESI research areas
Social Sciences, general
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