Policy communication: effectiveness of Chinese dialects
This paper explores the effectiveness of Chinese dialects in Singapore’s policy communication towards the elderly through the case studies of locally-produced dialect television shows. The government has sidelined the use of dialects for the benefits of its bilingual language policy. Surprisingly, s...
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Nanyang Technological University
2024
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1758582024-05-12T15:32:26Z Policy communication: effectiveness of Chinese dialects Sam, Wan Ting Kim Soojin School of Social Sciences sjkim@ntu.edu.sg Social Sciences Policy communication Chinese dialects Singapore This paper explores the effectiveness of Chinese dialects in Singapore’s policy communication towards the elderly through the case studies of locally-produced dialect television shows. The government has sidelined the use of dialects for the benefits of its bilingual language policy. Surprisingly, since 2014, the government has frequently engaged dialects in its policy communication. The government has recognised the importance of policy communication in policy implementation. To which, it is willing to ‘soften’ its stance on the use of dialects. However, there is minimal research done on the effectiveness of dialects despite this surprising move and there is no evaluation done on dialect policy communication. Thus, this paper aims to contribute to the literature in this aspect. Employing the framework of individual and structural barriers of participation by Rubenson and Desjardins (2009), respondents have surfaced that dialects can lower individual barriers of understanding caused by language barriers and reduce elderly’s indifference towards policies. However, it still has to work within legal regulations which is a structural barrier that has restricted the outreach of dialect communication. Respondents also surfaced certain limitations and future challenges which the paper has suggested some refinements to dialect policy communication accordingly. Beyond this case study, this paper hopes for more research to be conducted on policy communication (1) towards elderly of other ethnicities in Singapore and (2) in other Asia multilingual countries for a more comprehensive understanding of policy communication locally and regionally. Bachelor's degree 2024-05-08T05:55:42Z 2024-05-08T05:55:42Z 2024 Final Year Project (FYP) Sam, W. T. (2024). Policy communication: effectiveness of Chinese dialects. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175858 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175858 en SSS/PPGA/2023/S1/040 application/pdf Nanyang Technological University |
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This paper explores the effectiveness of Chinese dialects in Singapore’s policy communication towards the elderly through the case studies of locally-produced dialect television shows. The government has sidelined the use of dialects for the benefits of its bilingual language policy. Surprisingly, since 2014, the government has frequently engaged dialects in its policy communication. The government has recognised the importance of policy communication in policy implementation. To which, it is willing to ‘soften’ its stance on the use of dialects. However, there is minimal research done on the effectiveness of dialects despite this surprising move and there is no evaluation done on dialect policy communication. Thus, this paper aims to contribute to the literature in this aspect. Employing the framework of individual and structural barriers of participation by Rubenson and Desjardins (2009), respondents have surfaced that dialects can lower individual barriers of understanding caused by language barriers and reduce elderly’s indifference towards policies. However, it still has to work within legal regulations which is a structural barrier that has restricted the outreach of dialect communication. Respondents also surfaced certain limitations and future challenges which the paper has suggested some refinements to dialect policy communication accordingly. Beyond this case study, this paper hopes for more research to be conducted on policy communication (1) towards elderly of other ethnicities in Singapore and (2) in other Asia multilingual countries for a more comprehensive understanding of policy communication locally and regionally. |
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Kim Soojin |
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Kim Soojin Sam, Wan Ting |
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Final Year Project |
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Sam, Wan Ting |
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Sam, Wan Ting |
title |
Policy communication: effectiveness of Chinese dialects |
title_short |
Policy communication: effectiveness of Chinese dialects |
title_full |
Policy communication: effectiveness of Chinese dialects |
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Policy communication: effectiveness of Chinese dialects |
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Policy communication: effectiveness of Chinese dialects |
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policy communication: effectiveness of chinese dialects |
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Nanyang Technological University |
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2024 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175858 |
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