As decolonisation gathered pace in Southeast Asia, Singapore became a source of considerable concern to the Robert Menzies government. Britain's hold on its colony appeared increasingly precarious as political turbulence gripped the island. With a predominantly Chinese population, Singapore was considered susceptible to communist China's propaganda and subversion. By relying on previously classified Australian and British diplomatic documents, this article sheds light on the Australian approach to Singapore's political and constitutional development between 1955 and 1956 and, in so doing, it hopes to make a contribution to a better understanding of Australia's policies in a rapidly decolonising Southeast Asia. © 2012 The National University of Singapore.
CITATION STYLE
Benvenuti, A. (2012). Australia, the “Marshall experiment” and the decolonisation of Singapore, 1955-56. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 43(2), 257–279. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022463412000057
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