We, the citizens of Singapore: a study of the gender pay gap through the lens of gendered citizenship

Despite women achieving almost equal educational attainment and increased labour force participation rates, the gender pay gap remains a persistent societal issue in Singapore. Through in-depth interviews with working Singaporeans and stay-at-home parents, I argue that National Service (NS) and the...

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Main Author: Wee, Ethel Xian Ning
Other Authors: Ye Junjia
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174178
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1741782024-04-09T03:58:58Z We, the citizens of Singapore: a study of the gender pay gap through the lens of gendered citizenship Wee, Ethel Xian Ning Ye Junjia School of Social Sciences jjye@ntu.edu.sg Social Sciences Gender pay gap Gendered citizenship Despite women achieving almost equal educational attainment and increased labour force participation rates, the gender pay gap remains a persistent societal issue in Singapore. Through in-depth interviews with working Singaporeans and stay-at-home parents, I argue that National Service (NS) and the state play a significant role in gendering male citizenship, resulting in the emergence of additional masculine capital in the workplace. This awards men certain privileges, such as higher starting salaries for the same role and experience, thus (re)producing and reinforcing the gender pay gap. Male citizenship in Singapore perpetuates the breadwinner ideology, where men are seen as both providers and protectors of women and the family. Conversely, female citizenship sees women deprioritizing work commitments and career progression to continue taking on the bulk of caregiving responsibilities, resulting in a feminine penalty. Consequently, women internalize and normalize these gendered norms and reproduce traditional gender roles themselves, heightened by the intersection of religion. The public sphere remains male-dominated, and the emergence of masculine capital leads to a further legitimization of work done in the public sphere and a devaluation of unpaid work in the private sphere. This qualitative study thus highlights the nexus of the military, the workplace and the home as gendered spaces that not only reproduce and reinforce the gender pay gap but produce unequal forms of gendered citizenship. Master's degree 2024-03-19T02:10:02Z 2024-03-19T02:10:02Z 2024 Thesis-Master by Research Wee, E. X. N. (2024). We, the citizens of Singapore: a study of the gender pay gap through the lens of gendered citizenship. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174178 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174178 10.32657/10356/174178 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
Gender pay gap
Gendered citizenship
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Gender pay gap
Gendered citizenship
Wee, Ethel Xian Ning
We, the citizens of Singapore: a study of the gender pay gap through the lens of gendered citizenship
description Despite women achieving almost equal educational attainment and increased labour force participation rates, the gender pay gap remains a persistent societal issue in Singapore. Through in-depth interviews with working Singaporeans and stay-at-home parents, I argue that National Service (NS) and the state play a significant role in gendering male citizenship, resulting in the emergence of additional masculine capital in the workplace. This awards men certain privileges, such as higher starting salaries for the same role and experience, thus (re)producing and reinforcing the gender pay gap. Male citizenship in Singapore perpetuates the breadwinner ideology, where men are seen as both providers and protectors of women and the family. Conversely, female citizenship sees women deprioritizing work commitments and career progression to continue taking on the bulk of caregiving responsibilities, resulting in a feminine penalty. Consequently, women internalize and normalize these gendered norms and reproduce traditional gender roles themselves, heightened by the intersection of religion. The public sphere remains male-dominated, and the emergence of masculine capital leads to a further legitimization of work done in the public sphere and a devaluation of unpaid work in the private sphere. This qualitative study thus highlights the nexus of the military, the workplace and the home as gendered spaces that not only reproduce and reinforce the gender pay gap but produce unequal forms of gendered citizenship.
author2 Ye Junjia
author_facet Ye Junjia
Wee, Ethel Xian Ning
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Wee, Ethel Xian Ning
author_sort Wee, Ethel Xian Ning
title We, the citizens of Singapore: a study of the gender pay gap through the lens of gendered citizenship
title_short We, the citizens of Singapore: a study of the gender pay gap through the lens of gendered citizenship
title_full We, the citizens of Singapore: a study of the gender pay gap through the lens of gendered citizenship
title_fullStr We, the citizens of Singapore: a study of the gender pay gap through the lens of gendered citizenship
title_full_unstemmed We, the citizens of Singapore: a study of the gender pay gap through the lens of gendered citizenship
title_sort we, the citizens of singapore: a study of the gender pay gap through the lens of gendered citizenship
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174178
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