Participatory governmentality: social network transitions in Malaysia’s mental healthcare

With the growing use of networking communication technologies and social media networks in Malaysian and Asian Pacific societies, prospects for public health governance and health communications have been shifting. Based on Manuel Castells’ conceptual framework of the ‘network society’, this dissert...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Teoh, Sing Fei
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69145/
_version_ 1848800538734362624
author Teoh, Sing Fei
author_facet Teoh, Sing Fei
author_sort Teoh, Sing Fei
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description With the growing use of networking communication technologies and social media networks in Malaysian and Asian Pacific societies, prospects for public health governance and health communications have been shifting. Based on Manuel Castells’ conceptual framework of the ‘network society’, this dissertation conducts a structural analysis of Malaysia’s mental health governance. This research serves as a case study to respond to a broader objective to understand the evolution of national governmental practices and rationality in a transitioning Malaysian society. These (1) micro and (2) macro objectives form the primary research framework for the dissertation. Nine mental health initiatives by governmental, entrepreneurial, and civil societal leaderships in contemporary Malaysian society have been purposively sampled for a qualitative content analysis. These nine sets of data mainly come from organisational websites, official institutional documents, social networking platforms, and public media commentaries. Having studied the participatory network transitions, affordances, and practices in Malaysia’s new mental healthcare landscape, this dissertation critically discusses the emerging issues and challenges in this domain of societal governance, and proposes a new conceptual model of ‘participatory governmentality’ for emergent network societies. Here, the findings reveal that, in response to the gradual decline in the hegemony of traditional institutions, emergent affordances in Malaysia’s network society are being harnessed for (1) rebuilding a trusted, transparent system of collaborative governance, and (2) fostering participatory networks and public diplomacy for improving the quality of life (QOL) of the nation’s citizenries. Hence, it is suggested that ordinary citizens, societal and governmental leaderships, and researchers further investigate into how mobile communications can provide the means for improving or reforming self-care routines, for transparent participation of citizenries in governmental decision-making processes, and for building cross-sectoral solutions and public diplomatic practices in Malaysia.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:53:09Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-69145
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:53:09Z
publishDate 2022
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-691452025-02-28T15:15:20Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69145/ Participatory governmentality: social network transitions in Malaysia’s mental healthcare Teoh, Sing Fei With the growing use of networking communication technologies and social media networks in Malaysian and Asian Pacific societies, prospects for public health governance and health communications have been shifting. Based on Manuel Castells’ conceptual framework of the ‘network society’, this dissertation conducts a structural analysis of Malaysia’s mental health governance. This research serves as a case study to respond to a broader objective to understand the evolution of national governmental practices and rationality in a transitioning Malaysian society. These (1) micro and (2) macro objectives form the primary research framework for the dissertation. Nine mental health initiatives by governmental, entrepreneurial, and civil societal leaderships in contemporary Malaysian society have been purposively sampled for a qualitative content analysis. These nine sets of data mainly come from organisational websites, official institutional documents, social networking platforms, and public media commentaries. Having studied the participatory network transitions, affordances, and practices in Malaysia’s new mental healthcare landscape, this dissertation critically discusses the emerging issues and challenges in this domain of societal governance, and proposes a new conceptual model of ‘participatory governmentality’ for emergent network societies. Here, the findings reveal that, in response to the gradual decline in the hegemony of traditional institutions, emergent affordances in Malaysia’s network society are being harnessed for (1) rebuilding a trusted, transparent system of collaborative governance, and (2) fostering participatory networks and public diplomacy for improving the quality of life (QOL) of the nation’s citizenries. Hence, it is suggested that ordinary citizens, societal and governmental leaderships, and researchers further investigate into how mobile communications can provide the means for improving or reforming self-care routines, for transparent participation of citizenries in governmental decision-making processes, and for building cross-sectoral solutions and public diplomatic practices in Malaysia. 2022-07-23 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by_nc_nd https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69145/1/Dissertation-TSF-18024470.pdf Teoh, Sing Fei (2022) Participatory governmentality: social network transitions in Malaysia’s mental healthcare. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. participatory governmentality social network Malaysia mental healthcare
spellingShingle participatory
governmentality
social network
Malaysia
mental healthcare
Teoh, Sing Fei
Participatory governmentality: social network transitions in Malaysia’s mental healthcare
title Participatory governmentality: social network transitions in Malaysia’s mental healthcare
title_full Participatory governmentality: social network transitions in Malaysia’s mental healthcare
title_fullStr Participatory governmentality: social network transitions in Malaysia’s mental healthcare
title_full_unstemmed Participatory governmentality: social network transitions in Malaysia’s mental healthcare
title_short Participatory governmentality: social network transitions in Malaysia’s mental healthcare
title_sort participatory governmentality: social network transitions in malaysia’s mental healthcare
topic participatory
governmentality
social network
Malaysia
mental healthcare
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69145/